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WBAI     fol 
99.5 


July     1968 
Vol.9     No.7 


General  Manager:  Frank  Millspaugh 

Assistant  Manager:  Dale  Minor 

Music  Director:  Ann  McMillan 

Drama  &  Literature  Director:  Baird  Searles 

News  Producer:  Paul  Schaffer 

Production  Dep't.  Director:  Frank  Coffee 

Washington   Bureau:   Steve   Bookshester 


Traffic  Director:  Olenka  Bohachevsky 
Chief  Announcer:  Steve  Post 
Recording  Engineer:  Ed  Woodard 
Chief  Engineer:  Tom  Whitmore 
Subscription   Manager:   Franc  Altman 
Folio  Editor:   Rose   Mary  Anderson 
Office  Manager:  Kathy  Dobkin 


New  York  Board  of  Directors:  Dr.  Harold  Taylor,  Chairman;  Robert  Goodman,  Stephen 
Fischer,  Albert  Ruben,  Lawrence  Pinkham,  Mel  Greenberg. 

WBAI's  program  listings,  in  the  form  of  this  Folio,  are  published  every  month  as  a 
service  to  subscribers  who  support  our  nonprofit,  noncommercial  station  at  the  annual 
rate  $15.00  (student  subscriptions:  $5.00  for  6  months,  $10.00  for  a  year).  All  donations 
are  tax  deductible  and  checks  should  be  made  payable  to  'Pacifica  Foundation — WBAI.' 

WBAI  is  on  the  air  from  Monday  to  Friday,  from  7:00  A.M.  to  3:30  A.M.,  Saturday  and 
Sunday,  8:00  A.M.  to  3:30  A.M.  Our  transmitter  is  located  in  the  Empire  State  Building 
and  we  broadcast  with  an  Effective  Radiated  Power  of  5.4  KW  (horizontal)  and  3.85  KW 
(vertical).  Power  equivalent  to  50,000  Watts  at  500  feet.  Antenna  1223  feet  above 
average  terrain.  Height  above  sea  level  1515  feet.  Studio  and  offices  are  located  at 
30  East  39th  Street,  New  York  10016.  Phone  OXford  7-2288  (area  code  212). 

The  Subscription  Department  is  now  open  Monday  through  Friday  from  10:00  A.M.  to 
5:30  P.M.  Phone  0X7-4374-5. 

WBAI  is  owned  and  operated  by  the  Pacifica  Foundation,  a  nonprofit  institution.  Other 
Pacifica  Stations  are  KPFA,  Berkeley,  California  94704;  and  KPFK,  Los  Angeles,  California 
91062.  Subscriptions  are  transferable. 

The  duration  of  programs  scheduled  is  approximate.  Dates  after  listings  indicate  past 
or  future  broadcast.  Program  listings  are  copyrighted  (Copyright  1968,  WBAI)  and  are 
not  to  be  reprinted  without  written  permission.  Extracts  may  be  reprinted  for  highlight 
listings. 

WBAI   is  not  responsible  for  the   return   or  safety  of   unsolicited   tapes   or  manuscripts. 

FOLIO    NOTES 


JULY  GOALS 

Our  financial  goal  for  July  is  $16,000,  representing  300  new 
subscriptions  and  572  renewals,  a  relatively  modest  goal  reflecting 
the  summer  doldrums.  If  your  subscription  expires  in  July,  please 
renew  it  right  away.  For  you,  it  is  a  form  of  insurance  against 
not  receiving  the  Folio  at  all  or  receiving  it  late;  for  us,  is  a 
considerable  saving  of  time,  money  and  stress.  Daily  reports 
on  the  state  of  the  station's  finances  are  broadcast  just  before 
the  6:30  News;  a  weekly  comprehensive  report  is  given  on  Report 
to  the  Listener^  Thursdays  at  7:00  P.M.  (rebroadcast  on  Sundays 
at  10:30  A.M.). 
THE  COVER 

The  cover  drawing  of  the  reclining  nude  was  done  by  artist 
Emilio  Cruz,  who  contributed  the  drawing  to  WBAI  for  sale 
during  the  May  Marathon.  The  drawing  was  photographed  for 
us  by  Nathan   Rabin. 

PROGRAMMING  NOTES 

Beginning  this  month  the  6:30  News  will  be  a  half-hour 
program  five  days  a  week,  Monday  through  Friday.  In  addition 
to  the  extra  work  for  the  News  Dept.,  the  30-minute  newscast  will 
require  our  continued  and  expanded  use  of  the  services  of  Agence 
France  Presse.  WBAI  is  the  only  news  medium  in  the  United 
States  that  has  full  use  of  the  service  in  French.  Any  contribu- 
tions that  listeners  are  able  to  give  to  help  us  maintain  this 
service  will  be  appreciated.  You  can  send  contributions  in  any 
amount  to  WBAI-News.  Checks  should  be  made  payable  to 
WBAI-Pacifica. 


Marshall  Windmiller,  one  of  our  regular  commentators,  is  on 
summer  vacation.  His  Commentary  will  be  on  the  air  again  in 
September. 

We  would  like  to  give  a  belated  welcome  to  Stevenson  Phillips, 
whose  American  Odyssey  began  last  month  on  an  irregular  basis. 
In  July  American  Odyssey  will  be  broadcast  on  Thursday  eve- 
nings circa  7:45  P.M.  Mr.  Phillips'  unique  blend  of  songs  and 
stories  are  favorites  at  KPFK,  the  Pacifica  station  in  Los  Angeles; 
New  Yorkers  may  have  seen  him  in  his  recent  appearances  on 
Camera  Three. 

A  new  series.  The  New  Symposium:  A  Program  From  and  For 
the  Homosexual  Community,  begins  this  month  on  Monday,  July 
22,  at  11  P.M.  It  is  certain  to  be  adventurous  broadcasting  and 
guaranteed   to   be   a  program   you   could   hear   only   on  WBAI. 

In  a  four-part  series  that  will  be  broadcast  during  July  on 
Tuesdays  at  7:15  P.M.,  economist  Stephen  Sobotka  explains  what 
the  negative  income  tax  is  and  how  it  might  work  and  discusses 
its  advantages  over  existing  welfare  systems. 

Scientists  Speak  Out:  Lead  Poisoning  in  Slum  Kids,  to  be 
broadcast  on  July  10  at  7:45  P.M.,  is  the  first  of  a  series  that 
local  members  of  the  Scientists'  Committee  for  Public  Informa- 
tion is  preparing  for  WBAI.  SCPI,  which  was  organized  originally 
to  provide  information  to  interested  citizens  about  the  extent  and 
effects  of  nuclear  testing,  has  been  working  since  that  time  on  a 
number  of  other  issues  on  which  access  to  scientific  information 
is  essential  for  intelligent  public  discussion.  If  you  are  interested 
in  hearing  more  of  this  kind  of  programming,  please  let  us  know. 


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WBAI 


Page  3 


PACIFICA  OPENS 

By  this  time,  with  any  luck,  most  of  our  listeners  will 
have  heard  Steven  Bookshester  reporting  from  Washing- 
ton. Steve,  whose  documentary  on  the  October  1967 
March  on  Washington,  From  Protest  to  Resistance,  won 
the  "Major"  Armstrong  Award  for  WBAI  in  March, 
returned  to  the  station  in  June  and  promptly  left  to  set 
up  the  Washington  Bureau  now  listed  on  our  mast- 
head. The  Washington  Bureau  will  supply  us  imme- 
diately with  weekly  summaries  of  important  news  events 
affecting  the  government  of  the  nation  and  give  us 
live  coverage  of  major  events  and  important  government 
hearings. 


A  WASHINGTON  BUREAU 

We  hope  that  we  can  soon  beging  producing  programs 
in  Washington  on  a  number  of  areas  that  are  not  being 
adequately  covered  by  the  mass  media,  including  the 
problems  of  urban  America,  consumer  protection,  edu- 
cation, labor  and  agriculture.  Our  basic  purpose  would 
be  to  make  the  workings  of  the  federal  system  something 
less  of  a  mystery  to  the  interested  citizen.  The  possibilities 
are  great  and  the  need  is  urgent. 

Setting  up  the  Washington  Bureau  is  a  calculated  risk 
for  WBAI.  We  hope  that  better  programming  will  pro- 
duce results  in  the  form  of  more  listener-sponsors  and 
more  interested  listener-sponsors. 


JULY  HIGHLIGHTS 


PUBLIC  AFFAIRS 


AN   INTERVIEW  WITH   HERMAN   FERGUSON 

July   1 

RADICAL  POLITICS  AND  THE  STUDENT  MOVEMENT 

July  5 

SCIENTISTS  SPEAK  OUT:  LEAD  POISONING  IN  SLUM  KIDS 

July   10 

CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY 

July  13,  20,  27 

EXPERIMENTAL  CITIES  by  Athelstan   Spilhaus 

July  17 

5  BLACK  REPORTERS  TALK  ABOUT  RIOT  COVERAGE 

July  18 

HERBERT  MARCUSE 

July  21 

THE  NEW  SYMPOSIUM 

July  22,  29 

THE  ROLE  AND  REALITY  OF  RACE  by  Gunnar  Myrdal 

July  26 

IN  THE  FIST  OF  THE  REVOLUTION  with  Jose  Yglesias 

July  27 

THE  LIMITS  OF  THE  AMERICAN  SYSTEM 

July  28 

MUSIC 

BOMARZO  BY  ALBERTO  GINASTERA 

July  6 

EARLE  BROWN 

July  11 

LA  SALLE  STRING   QUARTET 

July  13 

PIANO  ROLL  BLUES 

July  14 

MILTON  BABBITT 

July  27 

DRAMA  AND  LITERATURE 

CAIN  by  Lord  Byron 

July  4 

THE  TRAGICAL  HISTORY  OF  DR.  FAUSTUS  by  Christopher  Marlowe 

July  7 

THE  SENTINEL 

July  12 

LETTERS  FROM  CONSTANTINOPLE  by  Lady  Mary  Wortley  Montagu 

July  15 

THE  MIND'S  EYE  THEATRE:  BOY  IN  DARKNESS  by  Mervyn   Peake 

July  20 

MIRACLES:   POEMS  BY  CHILDREN  OF  THE  ENGLISH-SPEAKING  WORLD 
July  24 


Index  Of  Commentaries 

DORE  ASHTON:  July  5,  7:30  P.M.  (July 
6,   11  A.M.) 

WILL  BRADY:  Fridays,  7:15  P.M.  (Satur- 
days,   10:45  A.M.) 

TANA  DE  GAMEZZ:  Sundays,  10:30  P.M. 
(Tuesdays,   1:15  P.M.) 

NEIL  FABRICANT:  Tuesdays,  7:00  P.M., 
except  July  30,  8:30  P.M.  (Wednesdays, 
11:00  A.M.,  except  for  July  3,  11:15 
A.M.) 

JULIUS  LESTER:  Sundays,  7:45  P.M. 
(Mondays,   11:00  A.M.) 

CONRAD  LYNN:  Mondays,  7:00  P.M. 
(Tuesdays,    10:30    A.M.) 

WILLIAM  MANDEL:  Saturdays,  7:30  P.M., 
July  6,  20;  7:45  P.M.,  July  13,  27. 
(Sundays,  11  A.M.,  July  7,  21;  11:15 
A.M.,  July  14,   28.) 

JOHN  MARSH:  Mondays,  7:15  P.M.  (Tues- 
days,   10:45  A.M.) 

BISHOP  JAMES  A.  PIKE:  Sundays,  7:15 
P.M.    (Mondays,    10:30) 

AYN  RAND:  Thursday,  July  11  &  25,  7:30 
P.M.    (Sunday,    July    14    &    28,    10:45 

A.M.) 
STUDENTS     FOR     A     DEMOCRATIC     SO- 
CIETY: Wednesdays,  7:00  P.M.  (Thurs- 
days,   11:00  A.M.) 

YOUNG  AMERICANS  FOR  FREEDOM:  Sun- 
days, 7:30  P.M.  (Mondays,  10:45  A.M.) 

• 

Programs  For  Sale 

Duplicate  tapes  of  most  of  the  programs 
broadcast  on  WBAI  can  be  bought  from 
the  station.  All  are  recorded  on  virgin 
tape  at  7l/2  ips.  (Other  speeds  are  avail- 
able on  request.) 

1    hour    $15.00 

30    minutes  $  7.50 

15  minutes   $  5.00 

To  purchase  tapes,  write  or  call  the  Traffic 
Department,  WBAI,  30  East  39th  Street. 
New  York  10016.  0X7-2288  weekdays, 
10  A.M.  -5   P.M. 


Page  4 


WBAI 


MONDAY,  JULY  1 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Some  love 
Larry  for  the  enemies  he's  made. 

9:00  MEDIEVAL  MUSIC,  ADAM  DE 
LA  HALLE  (1220-1287)  Le  Jeu  de 
Robin  et  Marion,  13  Rondeaux  Pro  Mu- 
sica  Antiqua  /  Safford  Cape  (ARC 
3002)  Chansons  and  Motets  of  the 
13th  Century  by  BERNART  DE  VEN- 
TADORN,  JAUFRE  RUDEL,  GUI- 
RAUT  RIQUIER  and  ANON.  Pro  Mu- 
sica  Antiqua  /Cape  (ARC  3051)  17 
French  Dances  of  the  13th  and  14th 
Centuries   (ARC  3002)    (July  18) 

10:15  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  A  rebroad- 
cast  of  Dick  Davy's  June  28th  pro- 
gram. 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike,  a  staff  member  of  the  Cen- 
ter for  the  Study  of  Democratic  Insti- 
tutions.   (June  30) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(June   30) 

11:00  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester, 
SNCC  leader  and  Guardian  columnist 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist.  (June 
30) 

11:30  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  Sam 
Julty  on  tape  from  June  29. 

12:00  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  The 
weekly  roundup  of  reviews  on  the 
arts.   (June  30) 

12:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  June  28  program 
from  the  News  and  Public  Affairs 
Department. 

1:45  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Gene  Thornton  on  Graham  Rey- 
nolds' Victorian  Paintings.    (June  30) 

2:00  THE  UNMARRIED  MOTHER  AND 
HER  FAMILY:  New  Approaches  to 
a  Persistent  Problem.  A  talk  by  Pa- 
tricia G.  Morisey,  former  Director  of 
the  Division  of  Child  Welfare  Agen- 
cies of  New  York.  From  the  Mid- 
way  #1215. 

3:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  Elisabeth 
Vandermei  with  new  sounds  (June  26) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  New 
York  City  Theatre  Workshop  Gordon 
Duffey,  Alma  Schieren  and  directors 
and  members  of  this  free  acting  com- 
pany for  young  people  discuss  their 
plans  for  presenting  a  block  opera 
this  summer.  Will  they  come  to  your 
block? 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #1 
JACQUES  HOTTETERRE  (c.  1760) 
Sonata  in  D  Major  for  Oboe  and  Con- 
tinuo  JEAN  BAPTISTE  LOEILLET 
Sonata.  Both  Bernard  Piguet,  baroque 
oboe  (Odyssey  32  16  0049)  ANTONIO 
VIVALDI  Concerto  in  D  Minor  R 
Zanfini,  oboe;  Virtuosi  di  Roma/Fa- 
sano  (Decca  DL  9679)  ALESSANDRO 
MARCELLO  Concerto  in  C  Minor  H. 
Holliger,  Geneva-  Baroque  Ensem- 
ble /  Auberon  (Mon.  2088)  GEORG 
PHILIPP  TELEMANN  (1681-1787) 
Partita  in  E  Minor  Harold  Gomberg, 


oboe,  Claude-Jean  Chiasson,  harpsi- 
chord (Decca  9618)  GEORGE  FRED- 
ERIC HANDEL  (1685-1759).  Concer- 
to in  B  -  flat  Major  Harry  Shulman, 
oboe;  orchestra  /  Saidenberg  ( K  a  p  p 
9041) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn, 
leading  attorney  to  the  revolutionary 
left.   (July  2) 

7:15  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh,  teacher  and  language  ex- 
pert.  (July  2) 

7:30  SCRAPS  Chris  Albertson's  excuse 
for  an  excursion  into  the  unconscious. 
(July  2) 

7:45  JOHN  L'HEUREUX,  S.  J.,  READS 
HIS  POEMS  AT  THE  YMHA  John 
L'Heureux  has  several  books  of  poetry 
published  and  also  Picnic  in  Babylon: 
A  Jesuit  Priest's  Journal.  Of  himself 
he  says,  "I  am  a  Jesuit  priest  aged 
33  for  whom  irony  is  a  way  of  life. 
I  believe  in  God."  His  poems  are  less 
enigmatic  than  is  that  statement.  The 
taping  was  done  at  the  Poetry  Center 
of  the  YM-YWHA  in  November  of 
1967.   (July  7) 

8:15  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #5 
Ralph  Rinzler  of  the  Smithsonian  In- 
stitution in  a  series  on  little-known 
contemporary  ethnic  and  primitive  mu- 
sic  (July  2) 


12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
speaks  the  name  at  which  the  world 
grows  pale. 


TUESDAY,  JULY  2 


Ralph  Rinzler  (left)  on  location. 

8:45  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS:  In 
the  Courts  David  Rothenberg  of  the 
Fortune  Society  talks  with  attorney 
Stanley  Reiban.    (July  2) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate interest  from  the  News  and 
Public  Affairs  Dept.   (July  2) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  2) 

11:00  AN  INTERVIEW  WITH  HER- 
MAN FERGUSON  Herman  Ferguson, 
a  former  assistant  principal  in  the  New 
York  City  schools,  who  was  indicted 
for  conspiracy  to  assassinate  moderate 
civil  rights  leaders,  talks  with  Kay 
Lindsey  about  the  public  schools  and 
the  changes  which  must  take  place  in 
the  system,  if  the  Black  Community  is 
to  survive.  (July  2) 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  ex- 
plains why  ketchup  is  America's  only 
sauce. 

9:00  STRING  QUARTETS  BEETHO- 
VEN (1770-1827)  Quartet  #11  in  F 
Minor,  Op.  95  Kroll  Quartet  (Epic  LC 
3779)  BRAHMS  (1833-1897)  Quartet 
#1  in  C  Minor,  Op.  51  #1  Amadeus 
Quartet  (West.  XWN  18440)  HIN- 
DIMITH  (1895-1963)  Quartet  #3, 
Op.  22  Kroll  Quartet  (Epic  LC  3779) 
(July  3) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Shaf- 
fer.  (July  1) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn. 
(July  1) 

10:45  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh.   (July   1) 

11:00  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS 
moderated  by  David  Rothenberg  (July 
1) 

11:30  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #5  by 
Ralph   Rinzler.    (July  1) 

12:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast   of  the   July   1   program. 

1 :00  SCRAPS  by  Chris  Albertson.  (July 
1) 

1:15  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD  by 
Tana  de  Gamez.  (June  30) 

1:45  THE  EVOLUTION  MAN  #6  Frank 
Coffee  continues  his  reading  of  Roy 
Lewis'   book.    (June  30) 

2:15  MUSIC  OF  JOHN  ALDEN  CAR- 
PENTER Adventures  in  a  Perambu- 
lator and   Skyscrapers. 

3:00  AN  INTERVIEW  WITH  HERMAN 
FERGUSON   For   details   see  July   1. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Tuesday's  Child,  the  extravaganza  by 
Bonnie  Tepper  and  Ed  Woodard.  Fol- 
lowed by  an  interview  with  Maurice 
Sendak,  illustrator  and  story  -  teller. 
This  is  the  first  in  a  new  series,  Path- 
ways to  Children's  Literature,  pro- 
duced by  Richard  S.  Eskay. 

5:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN 
EVOLUTION  #105  Gunther  Schuller 
introduces  and  discusses  music  from 
1947.  WALLINGFORD  RIEGGER 
(1885-1961)  Symphony  #3;  GUN- 
THER SCHULLER  (1925-  )  Quar- 
tet for  Four  Basses;  SAMUEL 'BAR- 
BER (1910-  )  Knoxville:  Summer 
1915. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with   Paul   Schaffer. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabricant, 
Legislative  Director  of  the  N.Y.  chap- 
ter of  the  American  Civil  Liberties 
Union.  (July  3) 

7:15   WHAT  IS   THE   NEGATIVE   IN 
COME  TAX?    The  first  of  four  pro- 
grams by  the  economist  Stephen   So- 
botka   on   a  proposal   to  use  the   ma- 
chinery of  the  federal  income  tax  to 


4ty-VBAI 


Page   5 


replace  present  welfare  programs. 
(July  4) 

7:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Jeannette  Rankin?  Richard  Lampar- 
ski  talks  with  the  first  woman  to  serve 
in  the  United  States  Congress.  In 
1961  she  voted  against  the  U.S.  entry 
into  World  War  I.  In  1941  she 
was  the  only  member  of  either  house 
to  vote  against  the  declaration  of 
war  against  Japan.  The  Pacifist-Re- 
publican recently  led  a  march  of  5,000 
women  in  Washington  protesting  the 
war  in  Vietnam.  Miss  Rankin  is  87 
years    old.    (July    3) 

8:15  LISTENING  BACK  #8  A  tribute 
to  George  M.  Cohan,  from  Bob  Brown's 
extensive  collection  of  recordings, 
which  consists  of  Cohan's  songs  sung 
by  Cohan  and  other  super  stars  of 
the  past.  (July  3) 

8:45  THE  MOVIES  Bob  Sitton  talks 
about  motion  pictures  with  someone 
who  either  is  in  or  makes  them.  (Julv 
4) 

9:15  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT  #1:  The  Psychopa- 
thology  of  Murder  A  discussion  on  the 
cultural  determination  of  homicide. 
From  the  Center  for  the  Study  of 
Democratic  Institutions.    (July  3) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.    (July  3) 

11:00  THE  MARIAN  McPARTLAND 
PROGRAM  Jazz  —  mostly  soft  and 
sweet  —  presented  by  the  pretty  pi- 
anist.  (July  3) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass  and  old  memories  and  young 
hopes. 


WEDNESDAY,  JULY  3 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  with  Larry 
Josephson  who  has  the  stuff  that 
makes  horseraces. 

9:00  SIXTEENTH  CENTURY  MUSIC 
Works  by  MUDARRA,  MILAN,  DE 
VICTORIA,  DE  MORALES,  FLECHA, 
ORTIZ,  LASSUS,  GOMBERT,  DE 
CABEZON  DEL  ENCINA,  PALES- 
TRINA  and  others.  N.  Y.  Pro  Musica/ 
Greenberg  (Dec.  DL  9409,  Dov.  HCR- 
5248)  Prague  Madrigal  Choir  /  Ven- 
hoda  (None.  H-1053)  Krainis  Consort 
and  Baroque  Ensemble  (Col.  ML  5875) 
Netherlands  Chamber  Choir  /  de  Nobel 
(Ang.  35667). 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.    (July  2) 

10:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Jeannette  Rankin?  Richard  Lampar- 
ski  interviews  the  former  Congress- 
woman.    (July  2) 

11:15  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant.   (July  2) 

11:30  LISTENING  BACK  #8  Bob  Brown 
and  old-time  records.   (July  2) 

12:00  THEATER  REVIEW  Isaiah  Shef- 
fer  on  the  more  interesting  recent 
play(s).    (June   30) 


12:15  SUMMER  COLLEGIUM  IN  EAR- 
LY MUSIC  #7  From  the  series  re- 
corded at  Windham  College  in  Putney, 
Vermont.    (June  28) 

1:15  THE  GROWING  INABILITY  TO 
DISSENT  Vern  Countryman,  prom- 
inent civil  liberties  attorney,  speaking 
at  the  Univ.  of  Calif.,  Berkeley. 
(KPFA)   (June  29) 

2:00  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT  #1:  The  Psychopa- 
thology  of  Murder  A  rebroadcast  of 
the   July  2   program. 

3:00  THE  MARIAN  McPARTLAND 
PROGRAM  A  rebroadcast  of  the  July 
2   program. 


4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  Uni- 
versity Settlement  Film  Club,  a  dis- 
cussion with  Rodger  Larson,  director, 
Jaime  Barrios,  instructor,  and  Ray- 
mond Esquilin,  Alfonso  Sanchez  and 
other  members  of  this  group  for 
young  filmmakers. 

5:00  STRING  QUARTETS  For  details, 
see  listing  for  July  2. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:    Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of  the 
N.Y.  chapter  of  Students  for  a  Demo- 
cratic Society.    (July  4) 

7:15  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  Andrew  Sards 
on  movies  and,  occasionally,  on  poli- 
tics.   (July  5) 

7:45  SHAKESPEARE  WITH  A  DIF- 
FERENCE Alfred  Rothschild,  editor 
of  Bantam  paperback  edition  of  the 
plays,  reads  and  dramatizes  the  works. 
(July   7) 

8:30   MISCELLANY 


8:45   PUBLIC   AFFAIRS   SPECIAL   An 

hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.    (July  4) 

9:45  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #12  The  con- 
tinuation of  the  readings  from  the 
famous  journals  and  correspondence 
of  the  Scots-born  Fanny  Calderon  de 
la  Barca  on  her  experiences  in  Mexico 
during  the  1830's.  The  wife  of  Spain's 
first  envoy  to  the  Republic  of  Mexico 
traveled  extensively  in  rural  Mexico. 
Fredi  Dundee  is  the  reader;  the  text 
is  from  the  Doubleday  &  Co.  edition. 
(July  4) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  4) 

11:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  The  cur- 
rent revolution  in  jazz  presented  by 
Elisabeth    Vandermei.    (July   8) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass.  Once  a  glentleman,  always  a 
gentleman. 


THURSDAY,  JULY  4 


8:15  AMERICAN  COLONIAL  CHAM- 
BER MUSIC  J.  F.  PETER  Quintet  No. 
1  in  D  Major  and  Quintet  No.  6  in 
E-Flat.  The  Moravian  Quintet.  J.  C. 
MOLLER  Quartet  in  E-Flat  and  J. 
GENOT  Quartet  in  D  Major.  The  New 
Music  Quartet.  (Folkways  FH  5109). 
JAMES  HEWITT  (1770-1827)  The 
Battle  of  Trenton,  "A  Favorite  His- 
torical Military  Sonata  dedicated  to 
General  Washington."  E.  Power  Biggs 
performing  on  the  Tannenberg  Organ 
(1804)  in  the  York  County  Historical 
Society,  York,  Pennsylvania.  (Colum- 
bia ML  5496)    (July  16) 

9:00  AMERICAN  MUSIC  CHARLES 
IVES  (1874-1954)  The  Fourth  of  July 
(1913).  New  York  Philharmonic/ 
Bernstein  and  Lipkin.  (Columbia  MS 
6889)  Three  Places  in  New  England 
(1903-1914)  Eastman-Rochester  Sym- 
phony Orchestra/ Hanson.  (Mercury 
MG  50149)  Variations  on  "America" 
(1891)  E.  Power  Biggs,  performing 
on  the  Hutchings  -  Plaisted  Organ 
(1875)  in  the  First  Universalist 
Church,  Woodstock,  Vermont.  (Co- 
lumbia ML  5496) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  3) 

10:30  THE  MOVIES  Bob  Sitton  inter- 
views a  guest.   (July  2) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
Students  for  a  Democratic  Society 
(July  3) 

11:15  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #12  Fanny  read 
by  Fredi.  (July  3) 

11:45  JAZZ  AND  SYMPHONIC  MUSIC 
Works  by  PROHASKA,  LIEBER- 
MAN,  HALL,  OVERTON,  JIMMY 
GIUFFRE  and  TEO  MACERO  (June 
30) 

12:45  WHAT  IS  THE  NEGATIVE  IN- 
COME TAX?   For  details  see  July  2. 


Page  6 


WBAl 


1 :00  THE  WAY  OF  HAIKU  J.  W.  Hack- 
ett  reads  selections  from  his  books  of 
Haiku  Poetry  and  discusses  the  writ- 
ing of  haiku  in  English.  (KPFA) 
(June  30) 

2:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  last  night's  program 
from   News  and  Public  Affairs. 

3:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  presented 
by  Ira   Gitler.    (June   30) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Watkins  Rock  returns  with  flying 
colors. 

5:00  MUSIC  BY  BUSONI  AND  REGER 
FERRUCCIO  BUSONI  (1866-1924) 
Fantasia  Contrappuntistica  for  Two 
Pianos  Peter  Serkin,  Richard  Goode, 
pianos  (Col.  MS  6891)  MAX  REGER 
1873-1916)  Fantasia  on  the  Chorale 
"Straf  Mich  Nicht  in  Deinem  Zorn" 
Op.  40,  No.  2  Simon  Preston,  organ 
(Argo  RG  420)  Sonata  in  A  Minor  for 
Cello  and  Piano,  Op.  116  Mischa 
Schneider,  cello;  Peter  Serkin,  piano 
(Col.  MS  6891). 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer. 

7:00  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER 
Frank  Millspaugh  reads  the  Declara- 
tion of  Independence  instead  of  finan- 
cial reports.   (July  7) 

7:15  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
Sandra  Margolin  announces  civic 
events  for  the  forthcoming  week  that 
various  groups  want  you  to  attend. 
(July   5) 

7:30  OF  UNICORNS  AND  UNIVERSES 
Baird  Searles  (and  aides)  in  their 
bi-weekly  survey  of  books,  magazines 
and  performances  in  the  fields  of  sci- 
ence fiction  and  fantasy.    (July  7) 

7:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  The  songs, 
stories  and  meanderings  of  Stevenson 
Phillips,  actor,  story-teller,  writer  and 
folknik.    (July   5) 

8:15  CAIN  From  the  BBC,  the  revolu- 
tionary drama  by  Lord  Byron,  adapted 
for  radio  by  J.  H.  Watson.  The  cast 
includes  John  Nebel  as  Cain  and  Wil- 
liam Devron  as  Lucifer,  and  the  BBC 
production  is  by  R.  D.  Smith.  (July 
5) 

9:15  TALK-BACK  A  live  discussion  of 
a  current  event,  book,  article  or  hap- 
pening, followed  by  a  period  during 
which  listeners  can  question  partici- 
pants by  calling  OX  7-8506. 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with   Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  5) 

11:00  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  A  story 
by  Stanley  Weyman  in  six  parts  about 
Gilles  de  Berault,  brilliant  swordsman 
and  notorious  gangster  of  the  time 
of  Cardinal  de  Richelieu.  (BBC) 
(July  5) 

11:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  Chris  Albertson 
presents  music  from  the  pre-now  pe- 
riod in  jazz.    (July  5) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass.  To  love  him  is  a  liberal  edu- 
cation. 


*    SS 

v..  ,# 


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FRIDAY,  JULY  5 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry,  like 
everyone,    is   not   now   that  which    he 

9:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #2  JOH- 
ANN  SEBASTIAN  BACH  Double 
Concerto  in  D  Minor  for  Violin,  Oboe 
and  Strings  BWV  1060  Josip  Klima, 
violin;  Andre  Lardrot,  oboe;  Solisti 
di  Zagreb  /  Janigro  (Bach  Guild  BG 
562)  Cantata  #82,  'Teh  habe  genug" 
Fischer-Dieskau,  baritone;  Hermann 
TSttcher,  oboe;  Berliner  Motettenchor ; 
Ristenpart  Chamber  Orch./Ristenpart 
(Deutsche  Grammophon  ARC  3058) 
Concerto  in  A  Major  for  Oboe  D'Amore 
and  Strings  Leon  Goossens,  oboe 
d'amore.   (July  8) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  4) 

10:30  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  (BBC) 
For  details  see  July  4. 

11:00  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  by  Andrew 
Sarris.   (July  3) 

11:30  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
by  Sandra  Margolin.   (July  4) 

11:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  by  Stev- 
enson  Phillips.    (July  4) 

12:15  OUT  OF  THE  EARTH  I  SING  The 
songs  and  stories  of  primitive  people 
read  and  discussed  by  Richard  Lewis. 
(June  29) 

12:45  JESSE  GREY  VS.  BILL  SMITH 
A  heated  discussion  of  Sen.  Eugene 
McCarthy's  domestic  policy  (June  29) 


Photograph  by  Bob  Anderson 

1:45  CAIN  (BBC)  For  details  see  July 
4. 

2:45  PAUL  HASTINGS  WILSON 
READS  HIS  POEMS  True  lyric  poe- 
try that  sounds  viable  and  alive  to 
our  mid-twentieth  century  ears  read 
by  the  poet  who  is  introduced  by 
Martin.  Last.  (June  29) 

3:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  presented  by  Chris 
Albertson.   (July  4) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  In- 
sight Out,  another  new  show,  pro- 
duced by  Howard  and  Jeff  Stein  and 
Allen   Barrett. 

5:00  FERRUCCIO  BUSONI  Piano  Con- 
certo, Op.  39  (1903-04)  Gunnar  Sch- 
midt-Isserstedt,  conductor.  (From  the 
WBAI  Archives  of  1956) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de   Gamez. 

7:00  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  of  the  week's 
news  with  Paul  Krassner,  if  the  tape 
arrives  from  California.   (July  8) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July  6) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  Dore  Ashton, 
art  critic  and  head  of  the  Humanities 
Dept.  of  the  School  of  Visual  Arts. 
(July  6) 

7:45  SPECIAL  REPORT  An  event  of 
current  interest  examined  in  detail. 
From  the  News  and  Public  Affairs 
Dept.    (July   6) 

8:15  RADICAL  POLITICS  AND  THE 
STUDENT  MOVEMENT  Robert 
Wolfe,  NYU  professor  of  history  and 


dfc'VBAI 


Page  7 


a  member  of  the  Lower  East  Side 
Citizens  for  Political  Action  (CIPA), 
speaking  on  May  1  at  NYU.   (July  7) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate interest  from  the  News  and 
Public   Affairs   Dept.    (July   8) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer. 

11:00  THEATER  FOR  THE  FOR- 
GOTTEN Performing  in  prisons,  for 
prisoners,  with  a  cast  and  crew  com- 
bining professional  actors  and  inmates, 
this  theater  has  a  unique  social  and 
artistic  role.  Akila  Columbis,  Beverly 
Rich,  Ray  Gordon  and  Antennis  Pe- 
travicius  discuss  their1  work.  (Pro- 
duced and  moderated  by  Ellen  Jaffe) 
(July  7) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  by  Bob 
Fass.  It  is  good  to  forgive  but  best 
to  forget. 


SATURDAY,  JULY  6 


8:00  CANTATAS  OF  JOHANN  SEBAS- 
TIAN BACH  #1  Cantata  #78,  "Jesu, 
der  du  meine  Seele";  Cantata  #106, 
"Gottes   Zeit   ist   die   allerbeste   Zeit" 

Both:  Edith  Mathis,  soprano;  Sybil 
Michelew,  contralto;  Theo  Altmeyer,  te- 
nor; Franz  Crass,  bass;  South  German 
Madrigal  Choir,  Consortium  Musicum/ 
Wolfgang  Gonnenwein  (Ang.  S  36354) 
Cantata  #56,  "Ich  will  den  Kreuzstab 
gerne  tragen"  Fischer-Dieskau,  bari- 
tone; Herman  Tottcher,  oboe;  Ber- 
lin Motet  Choir,  Ristenpart  Chamber 
Orch./Ristenpart  (Deutsche  Grammo- 
phon  ARC  3058)  Cantata  #51,  "Jauch- 
zet  Got  in  alien  Landen"  Judith  Ras- 
kin, soprano;  Robert  Heinrich,  trum- 
pet; Isidore  Cohen  and  Gerald  Tarack, 
violins;  Alexander  Kouguell,  cello; 
Albert  Fuller,  harpsichord;  Festival 
Orch.  of  N.  Y. /Thomas  Dunn  (Dec. 
DL  10089) 

9:30  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Ronny  Watkins  shares  books  and 
thoughts. 

10:30  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.    (July  5) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady 
(July  5) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  Dore  Ashton. 
(July  5) 

11:15  SPECIAL  REPORT  by  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.    (July  5) 

11:45  COUNTRY  MUSIC  A  rebroadcast 
of  Mr.  Whitmore's  June  30  produc- 
tion. 

12:15  DICK  GREGORY  A  talk  given  at 
the  National  Conference  on  Catholic 
Education    (June  30) 

1:15  MISCELLANY 

1:30  MY  CAPTIVITY  AMONG  THE 
SIOUX  INDIANS  #16  Fannie  Kelly's 
account  of  her  many  and  varied  expe- 
riences. Text  courtesy  of  the  pub- 
lisher, Corinth  Books  Inc. 

2:00  FOLK  MUSIC  TODAY  Israel  Young 


and  fellow  folk  artists  in  a  two-hour 
festival. 

4:00  HERBERT  FEINSTEIN  INTER- 
VIEWS HAROLD  LLOYD  The  vete- 
ran silent  comedian  discusses  his 
"nice  boy"  spectacles  and  death-defy- 
ing stunts  with  Herbert  Feinstein. 
(KPFA) 

5:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN 
EVOLUTION  #106  Gunther  Schuller 
introduces  and  discusses  music  from 
1948.  WILLIAM  SCHUMAN  (1910- 
)  Symphony  No.  6;  RICHARD 
STRAUSS  (1864-1949)  Four  Last 
Songs. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  GENESIS  OF  A  NATION:  Le  Roi 
de  la  Republic  The  rebellion  of  1837 
in  Lower  Canada  led  by  Louis  Joseph 
Papineau.    (CBC) 

7:15  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  Sam 
Julty  tells  you  how  to  disassemble 
your  car  and  repack  it  in  a  suitcase. 
(July  8) 

7:30  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
William  Mandel,  author  of  Russia  Re- 
Examined,  presents  translations  from 
Soviet   periodicals.    (KPFA)    (July   7) 

7:45  CLIFFORD  MASON  ON  THEA- 
TER Interviews,  reviews  and  general 
lambasting  of  current  plays  and  mo- 
vies from  the  point  of  view  of  the 
black   man.    (July    10) 

8:15  BOMARZO,  BY  ALBERTO  GINA- 
STERA  Mr.  Ginastera's  new  opera, 
recently  given  its  New  York  premiere 
and  subsequently  released  by  Columbia 
Records,  is  heard  in  its  entirety.  Ann 
McMillan  then  talks  with  the  com 
poser;  the  librettist,  Manuel  Mujica 
Lainez;  the  conductor,  Julius  Rudel; 
and  the  stage  director,  Tito  Capobian- 
co.  (These  talks  were  taped  especially 
for  WBAI)  The  cast  includes:  Salva- 
dor Novoa,  Richard  Torigi,  Michael 
Devlin,  Robert  Gregori,  Brent  Ellis, 
Joaquin  Romaguera,  Claramae  Turner 
Joanna  Simon,  Isabel  Penagos,  and 
David  Prather.  The  Chorus  and  Or- 
chestra of  the  Opera  Society  of  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  conducted  by  Julius 
Rudel.   (July  19) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  Steve  Post  proves 
that  human  nature  is  vicious. 


SUNDAY,  JULY  7 


:00  17th  CENTURY  ENGLISH  MUSIC 
ORLANDO  GIBBONS  Thus  Angels 
Sung;  Fantasias  1  to  3;  Almighty  and 
Everlasting  God;  Oh  My  Love,  How 
Comely  Deller  Consort,  Viol  Consort 
of  the  Schola  Cantorum  Basiliensis 
(Archive  3053)  HENRY  PURCELL 
Sonatas  of  3  Parts,  Nos.  1  to  6  Jaco- 
bean Ensemble/Thurston  Dart  (Spoken 
Arts  209)  WILLIAM  BYRD  Lullaby 
My  Sweet  Little  Baby;  My  Sweet  Lit- 
tle Darling  RICHARD  NICHOLSON 
In  a  Merry  May  Morn  ROBERT  PAR- 
SONS   Pandolpho   ALPHONSO    FER- 


RABOSCO  Viol  Fantasy  in  G  Major 
WILLIAM  BYRD  Come,  Pretty  Babe 
ANON.  O  Death,  Rock  Me  Asleep  Al- 
fred Deller,  countertenor;  Wenzinger 
Consort  of  Viols  of  the  Schola  Can- 
tarum  Basiliensis  /  Wenzinger.  (BG- 
557) 

9:30  MUSIC  OF  THE  WORLD'S  PEO- 
PLES Ethnic  airs  from  all  over  the 
earth,  compiled  and  assembled  by  the 
late  Dr.  Henry  Cowell.  (From  the 
WBAI  Archives) 

10:00  GOLDEN  VOICES  Great  operatic 
recordings  from  the  olden  days  pre- 
sented by  the  late  Anthony  Boucher. 
(KPFA) 

10:30  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER 
Another  airing  of  Mr.  Millspaugh's 
July   4   statement. 

10:45  OF  UNICORNS  AND  UNI- 
VERSES B.  Searles  and  aides  in  a 
repeat  of  the  July   4   program. 

11:00  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
by  William  Mandel.  (July  6) 

11:15  THEATER  FOR  THE  FOR- 
GOTTEN For  details  see  July  5. 

12:15  JOHN  L'HEUREUX,  S.J.  READS 
HIS  POEMS  AT  THE  YMHA  For 
details   see  July   1. 

12:45  RADICAL  POLITICS  AND  THE 
STUDENT  MOVEMENT  For  details, 
see  July  5. 

1:45  PIANO  MUSIC  OF  CHARLES-VA- 
LENTIN ALKAN  Le  festin  d'Esope, 
Op.  39  #12;  Barcarolle,  Op.  65  #6; 
Quasi-Faust  (from  Grande  Sonate,  Op. 
33;  Symphonic  (from  Op.  39).  Ray- 
mond Lewenthal,  piano  (RCA  Victor 
LSC  2815)    (July  9) 

2:30  THE  TRAGICAL  HISTORY  OF 
DR.  FAUSTUS  From  the  BBC  World 
Theatre  we  present  Stephen  Murray, 
Esme  Percy  and  Baliol  Holloway  in 
The  Tragical  History  of  Dr.  Faustus 
by    Christopher    Marlowe.    (July    11) 

4:00  NIGHT  INTO  DAY  A  little  bit  of 
Fass. 

5:00  THE  NEXT  FIFTY  YEARS  #6 
Dr.  John  E.  Burchard,  Dean  Emeritus 
of  the  School  of  Humanities  and  So- 
cial Sciences  at  M.I.T.  and  Mellon 
Professor  of  Environmental  Design 
at  the  Univ.  of  Calif.,  speaks  on  The 
Culture  of  Urban  America.  From  the 
1967  American  Institute  of  Planners 
conference. 

5:45  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Tiptoe  through 
the  bluegrass  with  Tom  Whitmore. 
(July  13) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  MAN  ON  A  LEASH  From  the 
BBC,  the  impressions  of  a  man  al- 
lowed out  on  parole  nearing  the  end 
of   a   long    prison    sentence.    (July    8) 

7:00  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Al  Lees,  film  critic  for  WBAI's 
The  Critical  People,  reviews  recent 
books  on  film,  including  Kiss,  Kiss, 
Bang,  Bang  by  Pauline  Kael,  Visconti 
by  Geoffrey  Nowell  Smith  and  The 
Disney  Version  by  Richard  Schickel. 
(July   8) 


Page  8 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike,  currently  a  member  of  the 
staff  of  The  Center  for  the  Study  of 
Democratic    Institutions.    (July   8) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(July  8) 

7:45  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester, 
SNCC  leader  and  Guardian  columnist, 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist  about  the 
movement.    (July  8) 

8:15  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  Brief 
reviews  of  the  week's  openings  in  the 
arts,  followed  by  arguments.  Partici- 
pants vary  but  should  include  Gene 
Thornton  for  Art  and  Architecture, 
Rose  Mary  Anderson  for  theater,  and 
Baird  Searles  for  dance  and  the  voice 
of  moderation.   (July  8) 

9:00  THEATRE,  NEW  YORK  A  once- 
a-month  special  on  new  companies 
and  events  off-  and  off-off-Broadway. 
The  news,  reviews  and  interviews  may 
be  rescheduled  for  future  broadcast. 
Produced  by  Sam  Blazer.   (July  9) 

10:00  THE  EVOLUTION  MAN  #7 
Frank  Coffee  reads  the  classic  by  Roy 
Lewis  on  a  family  of  ape-men  discov- 
ering such  things  as  windshield  wipers 
during  the  late  Stone  Age.   (July  8) 

10:30  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD 
Views  and  news,  by  Tana  de  Gamez. 
(July  8) 

11:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  with  Don 
Schlitten.    (July   11) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  Steve  Post  does 
pig  imitations. 


WBAI^pl 


MONDAY,  JULY  8 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  would 
enjoy  explaining  the  principles  of 
Hegelian  dialectic  but  he  simply  Kant. 

9:00  MUSIC  BY  HAYDN  Six  Canzon- 
nettes  Peter  Pears,  tenor;  Benjamin 
Britten,  piano  (Lon.  OS25321)  Trio 
in  C  Major  Members  of  the  Camerata 
Musicale,  Berlin  (None.  H- 71123) 
Lord  Nelson  Mass  Maria  Stader,  so- 
prano; Claudia  Hellman,  alto;  Ernst 
Haefliger,  tenor;  Victor  von  Halem, 
bass;  Budapest  Chorus,  Hungarian 
State  Symphony  Orch./Janos  Ferenc- 
csik  (Deutsche  Grammophon  139  195) 

10:15  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  by  Paul 
Krassner.  (July  5) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike   (July  7) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  YAF.  (July  7) 

11:00  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester 
and  a  guest.   (July  7) 

11:30  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  by 
Sam  Julty.  (July  6) 

11:45  MAN  ON  A  LEASH  A  BBC  pro- 
gram on  a  prisoner  out  on  parole. 
(July  7) 

12:00  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  For 
skimpy  details,  see  July  7. 

12:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  5   program. 


1:45  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Al  Lees  on  Kiss,  Kiss,  Bang, 
Bang;  Visconti  and  The  Disney  Ver- 
sion.   (July  7) 

2:00  FRANCE  AND  NATO:  Law  and 
Peaceful  Change  A  talk  by  Eric  Stein, 
Prof,  of  Law  at  the  Univ.  of  Michi- 
gan at  Ann  Arbor.  From  the  Midway 
#1216. 

3:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  A  rebroad- 
cast of  Elisabeth  Vandermei's  July  3 
program. 

4:00    YOUNG    PEOPLE'S    PROGRAM 

Another  look  at  The  Real  Story  with 
Richard    Schiffman. 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  OBOE  #2  Works  by 
Bach.  For  details,  see  July  5. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de   Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn, 
leading  attorney  to  the  revolutionary 
left.    (July  9) 

7:15.  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh,  teacher  and  language 
expert.    (July  9) 

7:30  SCRAPS  A  crazyquilt  pieced  to- 
gether by  Chris  Albertson.   (July  9) 

7:45  DICK  GREGORY  Kay  Lindsey 
talks  with  the  presidential  candidate 
about  his  campaign  and  his  platform. 
(July   10) 

8:15  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #6 
Ralph  Rinzler  continues  his  fieldtrips 
into    contemporary    folklife.    (July    9) 

8:45  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS:  The 
California  Experiment  David  Rothen- 
berg  of  the  Fortune  Society  talks 
with  Manuel  Rodriguez  and  Ed  Les- 
ter.   (July  9) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.    (July  9) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS   with   Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  9) 

11:00  THE  SOLDIER  AND  THE  WOM- 
AN A  play  from  the  BBC  by  Elaine 
Morgan.  The  cast  includes  Rosalie 
Crutchley,  Edward  Hardwicke,  Cyril 
Luckham    and    Denys    Graham.    (July 

11) 
12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  It  is  pos- 
sible to  imitate  Bob  Fass  without  be-, 
ing   Bob  Fass? 


TUESDAY,  JULY  9 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  with  Larry 
Josephson  who  to  himself  is  dearer 
than  a  friend. 

9:00  STRING  QUARTETS  MOZART 
Quartet  #22  in  B-Flat  Major,  K.  589 
Budapest  Quartet  (Col.  CL  5008) 
GLINKA  Quartet  in  F  Major  (1830) 
Westwood  Quartet  (Contemp.  SFM 
1001)  BERG  Lyric  Suite  (1926)  Juil- 
liard  Quartet  (RCA  LM  2531)  (July  23) 


10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  8) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn. 
(July  8) 

10:45  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John   Marsh.    (July  8) 

11:00  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS  A 
discussion  on  the  problems  of  pris- 
oners and   ex-prisoners.    (July   8) 

11:30  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #6  A 
series  presented  by  Ralph  Rinzler. 
(July  8) 

12:00.  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast   of   the     July   8    program. 

1:00  SCRAPS  of  Chris  Albertson  (July 
8) 

1:15  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD  A 
rebroadcast   of  the   July   7   program. 

1:45  THE  EVOLUTION  MAN  #7  Frank 
Coffee   reads   Roy  Lewis.    (July  7) 

2:15  THEATRE,  NEW  YORK  A  re- 
broadcast of  the  July  7  program. 

3:15  PIANO  MUSIC  OF  CHARLES- 
VALENTIN  ALKAN  (1813-1888)  For 
details  see  July  7. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Tuesday's  Child,  a  trip  into  the  un- 
known with  Bonnie  and  Ed.  Then,  an 
interview  with  Jeanne  Bendick,  chil- 
dren's author,  on  Pathways  to  Chil- 
dren's   Literature. 

5:00  MEDIEVAL  MUSIC  LEONINUS 
Viderunt  Omnes,  Alleluya,  Epulemur 
in  Azimis,  Propter  Veritas,  Gaude 
Maria  and  Judaea  et  Jerusalem.  ANON. 
The  Play  of  Daniel. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS   with    Paul    Schaffer. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant,  Legislative  Director  of  the  N.Y. 
chapter  of  the  ACLU.    (July  10) 

7:15  HOW  WOULD  THE  NEGATIVE 
INCOME  TAX  WORK?  The  econo- 
mist Stephen  Sobotka  explains  how 
the  negative  tax  would  be  administer- 
ed and  how  its  benefits  for  poor  peo- 
ple would  be  calculated.  The  second 
of  four  programs.  (July  11) 

7:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Ruth  Donnelly?  The  wise-cracking  ac- 
tress whose  cameo  parts  saved  many 
a  movie  tells  Richard  Lamparski  about 
the  best  bit  she  ever  did  (it  landed 
on  the  cutting  room  floor).  Her  cre- 
dits include:  Bells  of  St.  Mary's,  Mr. 
Deeds  Goes  to  Town,  Holiday,  and 
Mr.  Smith  Goes  to  Washington.  (July 
8) 

8:00  LISTENING  BACK  #9:  October, 
1929  From  his  collection  of  period  re- 
cordings Bob  Brown  plays  music  of 
the  time  of  the  Crash  by  performers 
such  as  Vallee,  Brice,  Chevalier,  Jol- 
son,  Coward,  Cantor,  Morgan,  Etting, 
and   Waters.    (July   10) 

8:30  RADIO  HAPPENING  #1  Com- 
posers John  Cage  and  Morton  Feld- 
man  converse.  (WBAI  Archives)  (July 
10) 

9:15  ARTS  EXTRA  An  hour  left  open 
for  a  program  or  two  from  the  Dra- 
ma and  Literature  Dept.    (July  10) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 


WBAI 


Page  9 


STEREO 


V  MESSENQEB    <T 


SERVICE 


Virgo  Plus  4  Equals  .  .  . 

QUICKSILVER  MESSENGER  SERVICE 
CHILDREN  OF  THE  FUTURE 

THE  STEVE  MILLER  BAND 


The    best    of    the   San    Francisco 
sound     groups     in     the    country, 
playing    their    own    music,    doing 
their  own   thing   .   .   . 
ST  2904 


OUTTASIT& 


Pretty,     down     home     blue-eyed 
San     Francisco     soul     from     the 
heaviest     band     in     town — The 
Steve   Miller    Band! 
ST  2920 


10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
er    (July  10) 

11:00  SOMA  MALKINE  Troubadour 
songs  from  then  and  now  by  the 
French-born  recording  artist.  (July 
10) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
interviews  members  of  the  WAF- 
FLES —  the  "Women's  Auxiliary  to 
the   French   Foreign   Legion." 


WEDNESDAY,  JULY  10 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  Jos- 
ephson  gives  his  recipe  (based  on  that 
of  Bob  and  Ray)  for  chocolate-cov- 
ered  horseshoes. 

9:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #3  JOH- 
ANN  CHRISTIAN  BACH  Quintet  in 
F  Major  for  Oboe,  Harpsichord  and 
Strings  Helmut  Winschermann,  oboe; 
Reinhold  Barchet,  violin;  Giinther  Lem- 
men,  viola;  Hans  Munch-Holland,  cello. 
Irmgard  Lechner,  harpsichord.  (Mu- 
sic Guild  MS-104)  KARL  DITTERS 
VON  DITTERSDORF  Concerto  in  G 
Major  for  Oboe  and  Orchestra  Evert 
van  Tricht,  oboe;  Vienna  Symphony 
Orchestra  /  Paumgartner  (Merc.  MG 
50403)  CARL  PHILIPP  EMANUEL 
BACH  Concerto  in  E-Flat  Major  for 
Oboe  and  Orchestra  Heinz  Holliger, 
oboe;  Geneva  Baroque  Orch./Auber- 
son  (Mon.  S2088)  JOHANN  CHRIS- 
TIAN FISCHER  Concerto  #2  in  E- 
Flat  Major  for  Oboe  and  Orchestra 
Andre  Lardrot,  oboe;  Wiener  Solisten/ 
Bbttcher     (Van.  1238)   (July  12) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  9) 

10:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Ruth  Donnelly?  For  details  see  July  9. 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant.   (July  9) 

11:15  LISTENING  BACK  #8  Bob  Brown 
and  old  records.    (July  9) 

11:45  CLIFFORD  MASON  ON  THEA- 
TER  A   rebroadcast  of  Mr.    Mason's 


July   6   program. 

12:15  RADIO  HAPPENING  #1  For  de- 
tails see  July  9. 

1:00  PIONEER  PEOPLE  OF  THE 
NORTHWEST  A  slice  of  North  Amer- 
ican frontier  history,  recalled  by  the 
men  and  women  who  created  it  in  the 
interior  wilderness  of  British  Colum- 
bia, sixty  to  eighty  years  ago.  (CBC) 

1:30  AN  INTERVIEW  WITH  DICK 
GREGORY    For    details    see    July    8. 

2:00  ARTS  EXTRA  A  rebroadcast  of 
last  night's  program  from  the  Dra- 
ma  and   Literature   Dept. 

3:00  SON  I A  MALKINE  Troubadour 
songs.   (July  9) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
The  Sunflower  Show,  a  summer  gar- 
den. 

5:00  MUSIC  BY  JOLIVET  Concerto  for 
Cello  and  Orchestra,  Concerto  for 
Flute  and  String  Orchestra,  Concerto 
for  Ondes  Martenot  and  Orchestra. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  N.Y.  Students  for*  a  Democratic 
Society.    (July   11) 

7:15  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  Andrew  Sarris 
on  current  movies,  in  the  houses  and 
on  the  telly    (July   12) 

7:45  SCIENTISTS  SPEAK  OUT:  Lead 
Poisoning  in  Slum  Kids  Members  of 
the  New  York  Scientists'  Committee 
for  Public  Information  discuss  the 
efforts  they  and  other  SCPI  workers 
in  other  parts  of  the  country  have 
made  to  eradicate  lead  poisoning  in 
children,  a  preventable  illness  that 
can  lead  to  permanent  mental  retar- 
dation. Glenn  Paulson  moderates  and 
introduces  the  speakers:  Dr.  Edmund 
Rothschild,  Dr.  Evelyn  Mauss,  Dr.  Joel 
Buxbaum,  Miss  Madelyn  Connely  and 
Conrad  Lynn.   (July  12) 

8:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
program  of  immediate  importance 
produced  by  the  News  and  Public  Af- 
fairs  Dept.    (July   11) 


9:45  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #13  Fredi  Dun- 
dee reads  from  journals  and  corre- 
spondence of  Fanny  Calderon  de  la 
Barca,  the  mid  -  nineteenth  century 
visitor  to  Mexico.   (July  11) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS   with  Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July   11) 

11:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  Mind-blow- 
ing sounds  —  mostly  jazz  —  presented 
by  the  knowledgeable  Elisabeth  Van- 
dermei.    (July  15) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
answers  the  question:  If  you  make 
hay  while  the  sun  shines  what  do  you 
do  when  the  moon  glows? 


THURSDAY,  JULY   11 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  says 
no  sensible  person  ever  made  an 
apology. 

9:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN 
EVOLUTION  #107  Gunther  Schuller 
introduces  and  discusses  more  music 
from  1948.  OLIVIER  MESSIAEN 
(1908-  )  Canteyodjaya  MILTON  BAB- 
BITT (1916-  )  Composition  for  Four 
Instruments  JOHN  CAGE  (1912-  ) 
Sonatas  5-8  for  Prepared  Piano. 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July    10) 

10:30  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #13  Fredi  Dun- 
dee reads  the  book  by  Fanny  Calde- 
ron de  la  Barca.   (July  10) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  N.Y.   SDS.    (July  10) 

11:15  HOW  WOULD  THE  NEGATIVE 
INCOME  TAX  WORK?  The  second 
of  four  programs  by  Stephen  Sobotka. 
(July  9) 

11:30  THE  TRAGICAL  HISTORY  OF 
DR.  FAUSTUS  Christopher  Marlowe's 
classic.  (BBC)  For  details,  see  July  7. 

1:00  THE  SOLDIER  AND  THE  WOM- 
AN A  play  from  the  BBC.  For  details, 
see  July  8. 


Page    10 


WBAf 


2:00    PUBLIC    AFFAIRS    SPECIAL    A 

rebroadcast  of  last  night's  program 
from  the  News  and  Public  Affairs 
Dept. 

3:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  A  rebroad- 
cast of  Don  Schlitten's  July  7  pro- 
gram. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Tick  tock  with   Watkins   Rock. 

5:00  THE  SEVEN  LAST  WORDS  HEIN- 
RICH  SCHUTZ  (1585-1672)  The  Sev- 
en Sayings  of  Jesus  Christ  from  the 
Cross  Akademie  Kammerchor,  Vienna 
Symphony  Orch./Grossman  JOSEF 
HAYDN  The  Seven  Last  Words  of 
Christ  on  the  Cross  I  Soloisti  di  Zag- 
reb/A.  Janigro    (Van.  VRS-1148) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer. 

7:00  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  Full 
details  on  the  fifth  billing  of  delin- 
quent Marathon  pledges  given  by 
Mr.  Millspaugh  or  his  summer  vaca- 
tion  substitute.    (July    14) 

7:15  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
This  week  Sandra  Margolin  announces 
only  air-conditioned  upcoming  events. 
(July  12) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  Ayn  Rand,  au- 
thor of  Atlas  Shrugged  and  The  Foun- 
tainhead.    (July   14) 

8:00  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  Stories, 
songs  and  accounts  of  explorations  by 
Stevenson  Phillips.   (July  12) 

8:30  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #1  Farm 
and  herding  tunes  that  date  back  to 
the  pre-Christian  era.  Material  from 
Radio  Sweden,  produced  by  Ann  Mc- 
Millan.   (July  12) 

8:50  EARLE  BROWN  The  contempora- 
ry composer  talks  about  his  music 
with  Ann  McMillan.  (July  12)  (WBAI 
Archives) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS   with   Paul    Fischer. 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July   12) 

11:00  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  The 
second  part  of  the  story  by  Stanley 
Weyman.   (BBC)    (July  12) 

11:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  Chris  Albertson 
finds  some  lost  jazz  chords  and  pre- 
sents them  with  a  flourish.    (July  12) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Does 
Bob  Fass  deserve  a  monument?  Does 
he   need    one  ? 


FRIDAY,  JULY  12 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  Jos- 
ephson  with  little  deeds  of  kindness 
and   little  words   of  love. 

9:00  STRING  QUARTETS  LUIGI 
BOCCHERINI  Quartet  in  F  Major, 
Op.  64  #1  Carmirelli  Quartet  (Mus. 
Guild  MS -123)  GABRIEL  FAURE 
Quartet,  Op.  121  Loewenguth  Quartet 
(Vox  SVBX  570)  BELA  BARTOK 
Quartet  #6  (1939)  Juilliard  Quartet 
(Col.   ML  4280)    (July  24) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  11) 

10:30    UNDER    THE    RED    ROBE    For 


details,   see  July  11. 
11:00    FILMS    IN    FOCUS    by    Andrew 

Sarris.    (July    10) 
11:30  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 

by  the  Community  Bulletin  broad. 
(July  11) 

11:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  by  Stev- 
enson Phillips.    (July   11) 

12:15  SCIENTISTS  SPEAK  OUT:  Lead 
Poisoning  in  Slum  Kids.  For  details, 
see  July  10. 

1:15  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #1  For 
details  see  July  11. 

1:35  EARLE  BROWN  talks  with  Ann 
McMillan.   (July  11) 

3:00  DUDLEY  FITTS  READS  FROM 
HIS  POEMS  Widely  known  for  his 
sympathetic  translations  of  Greek 
verse  Dudley  Fitts  is  also  a  fine  poet 
in  his  own  right.  On  this  Yale  Series 
of  Recorded  Poets  record  he  reads 
four  long  poems  which  establish  his 
stature  as  an  original   poet.    (Decca) 

3:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  Chris  and  the 
chords.    (July  11) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  The 
Spindle,  the  Shuttle,  and  the  Needle, 
from  the  Grimm  Bros.;  The  Most 
Beautiful  Woman  in  the  World,  a  folk 
tale;  Blue's  Broken  Heart,  a  story  by 
Jeanne  Merrill  and  Ronni  Solbert. 
The  readers  include  Clio  Vias  and 
Sally   Goldin. 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #3  For 
details,    see   listing  for  July   10. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:  Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  of  the  week's 
events  by  Hugh  Romney  of  the  Hog 
Farm  Commune.   (July  15) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July  13) 

7:30  SPECIAL  REPORT  An  event  of 
the  week  examined  in  detail  by  some- 
one in  News  and  Public  Affairs.  (July 
13) 

8:00  JAY  WRIGHT  READS  HIS  POEMS 
AT  THE  YMHA  Jay  Wright  who  lives, 
as  do  so  many  poets,  in  New  York, 
recently  toured  five  southern  black  col- 
leges reading  his,  and  others',  poems 
and  talking  with  the  students  about 
poetry.  The  Poets  Press  honored  the 
occasion  by  publishing  a  small  book 
of  his  work,  Death  As  History.  This 
taping  is  provided  through  the  cour- 
tesy of  the  YM-YMHA  Poetry  Center. 
(July  14) 

8:30  MISCELLANY 

8:45  THE  SENTINEL  by  Arthur  Clarke. 
This  story,  written  in  1951,  is  the 
basis  for  the  Stanley  Kubrick  produc- 
tion of  2001:  A  SPACE  ODYSSEY 
which  was  scripted  by  author  Clarke. 
Mitchell  Harding  reads  with  the  help 
of  some  electronic  music.  (KPFK) 
(July  14) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  One 
of  the  three  hours  left  open  during 
the  week  for  programs  of  immediate 
importance  from  the  News  and  Public 
Affairs  Dept.   (July  15) 


10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  13) 

11:00  RADIO  HAPPENING  #2  Com- 
posers John  Cage  and  Morton  Feldman 
converse  further.  (WBAI  Achives) 
(July   13) 

12:t»0  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  so- 
licits funnier  one  -  liners,  no  public 
credit,  no  thank-you  letters  —  your 
only  reward  is  an  inner  glow. 


SATURDAY,  JULY  13 


8:00  MUSIC  BY  MAX  REGER  Varia- 
tions and  Fugue  in  E  Major  on  a 
Theme  of  J.  A.  Hiller,  Op.  100  Ham- 
burg Philharmonic  State  Orch. /Joseph 
Keilberth  (Tel.  IGX  66049)  Romanze 
and  Prelude  and  Fugue  for  Piano, 
Left  Hand  Paul  Wittgenstein,  piano 
(Per.  SPL  742)  Concerto  for  Piano 
and  Orchestra  in  F  Minor,  Op.  114 
Rudolf  Serkin,  piano;  Philadelphia 
Orch./Ormandy. 

9:30  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Ronny's  reading  list  includes  Ameri- 
can Indian  legends,  tales  by  O.  Hen- 
ry, and  short  stories  by  Franz  Kafka. 
Which  will  it  be  today? 

10:30  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July   12) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July   12) 

11:00  SPECIAL  REPORT  No  details,  a 
rebroadcast  of  July   12   program. 

11:30  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Last  Sunday's 
production,   rebroadcast. 

12:00  RADIO  HAPPENING  #2  For  de- 
tails see  July  12 

1:00  RAY  BOLGER  The  dancer  and  co- 
median discusses  his  career  with 
Herbert  Feinstein.  Bolger  covers  his 
work  on  stage  and  in  films  since  1925, 
in  George  White's  Scandals,  as  the 
Scarecrow  in  The  Wizard  of  Oz,  and 
as   Charley  in   Charley's   Aunt. 

1:30  MY  CAPTIVITY  AMONG  THE 
SIOUX  #18  Fannie  Kelly's  account 
of  her  many  and  varied  experiences 
among  the  Sioux.  Text  courtesy  of 
Corinth   Books,    Inc. 

2:00  TWO  HOURS  OF  JAZZ  Artie 
Shaw's  Final  Band:  A  Postscript  to 
Popularity,  presented  by  Jack  Mc- 
Kinney. 

4:00  "OF  LOVE  AND  DUST"  Ernest 
J.  Gaines  reads  Chapter  26  of  his 
novel,  published  in  1967.  Gaines'  other 
works  include  Catherine  Carmier,  a 
novel,  and  stories  published  in  South- 
ern Writing  in  the  Thirties  and  The 
Best  Stories  by  Negro  Writers. 
(KPFA) 

5:00  TWENTIETH-CENTURY  AMERI- 
CAN MUSIC  DONALD  ERB  (1927- 
)  Sonata  for  Harpsichord  and 
String  Quartet  (1962);  John  White, 
harpsichord;  Koch  Quartet  (CRI  183). 
RUDOLPH  BUBALO  (1927-  )  Three 
Pieces    for    Brass    Ensemble    (1959); 


^WBAI 


Page    1 1 


$ 


Cleveland  Brass  Ensemble  (CRI  183). 
DIKA    NEWLIN     (1923-  )     Piano 

Trio,  Op.  2  (1948)  Liza  Marketta, 
piano;  Jack  Rothstein,  violin;  Karel 
Horitz,  cello  (CRI  170).  MARCEL 
DICK  (1898-  )  Suite  for  Piano  (1959), 
JULI  NUNLIST  (1916-  Two  Piano 
Pieces  (1961),  and  JANE  CORNER 
YOUNG  Dramatic  Soliloquy  for  Pia- 
no (1961);  Arthur  Loesser,  piano  (CRI 
183). 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  GENESIS  OF  A  NATION:  Re- 
sponsible Government  and  the  Mob  A 
series  on  the  history  of  Canada.  To- 
day, the  aftermath  of  the  1837  rebel- 
lions leading  up  to  the  burning  of  the 
Montreal  House  of  Parliament.  (CBC) 

7:15  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  Sam 
Julty  discusses  textual  problems  in 
producing  ArribaPs  Automobile  Grave- 
yard.   (July  15) 

7:45  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
William  Mandel,  author  of  Russia 
Re-Examined,  with  the  latest  from 
Soviet  periodicals.   (KPFA)    (July  14) 

8:00  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  The  Poli- 
tics of  Urban  Education  The  first  of 
four  programs  from  a  conference  on 
urban  affairs  held  in  April  at  Newark 
State  College.  Panelists  in  today's 
program  are  Dr.  Doxie  Wilkerson, 
Associate  Professor  of  Education  at 
Yeshiva  University  and  Mr.  Matthew 
Feldman,  former  chairman  of  the  Com- 
mittee on  Education,  New  Jersey 
State  Senate.  (July  16) 

9:00    SCIENCE:    The    New    Humanism 

A  talk  given  by  Dr.  Jacob  Bronowski, 
Senior  Fellow  of  the  Salk  Institute 
for  Biological  Studies  in  San  Diego. 
The  talk  was  given  at  the  convention 
of  the  National  Science  Teachers  As- 
sociation and  was  sponsored  by  the 
Damon  Foundation.   (July  14) 

9:45  LONDON  SCHOOL  OF  CONTEM- 
PORARY DANCE  Betty  Roszak,  cor- 
respondent in  London,  talks  with 
Robin  Howard,  the  General  Director 
of  the  London  School,  and  Robert 
Cohen,  its  Artistic  Director,  about  the 
school's  contribution  to  dance  in  Eng- 
land.   (KPFA)    (July  14) 

10:30  LA  SALLE  STRING  QUARTET 
A  concert  given  at  Town  Hall  on  Feb- 
ruary 5,  1966.  The  La  Salle  Quartet 
is  now  in  residence  at  the  College 
Conservatory  of  Music,  University  of 
Cincinnati.  The  members  are  Walter 
Levin  and  Henry  Meyer,  violins,  Peter 
Kamnitzer,  viola,  and  Jack  Kirstein, 
cello.  HENRY  PURCELL  Three  4- 
part  Fantasias;  WITOLD  LUTO- 
SLAWSKI  Quartet  (1964),  (first  New 
York  performance);  LUDWIG  VAN 
BEETHOVEN  Quartet  in  C-sharp 
minor,  Op.  131  (WBAI  Archives). 
(July  17) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  O  wad  some  pow- 
er the  giftie  gie  him.  With  Steve 
Post. 


SUNDAY,  JULY  14 


8:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  LU- 
CIANO BERIO  Circles  (  1  960  )  on 
poems  by  e.  e.  cummings  Cathy  Ber- 
berian,  mezzo-soprano;  Francis  Pierre, 
harp;  Jean  Pierre  Drouet  and  Boris 
de  Vinogradov,  percussion  (Time 
58003)  PIERRE  BOULEZ  Le  Mar- 
teau  sans  Maitre  (1957)  Jeanne  De- 
roubaix,  contralto;  Severino  Gazzeloni, 
alto  flute;  Georges  van  Gucht,  xylo- 
rimba;  Claude  Ricou,  vibraphone;  Jean 
Batigue,  percussion;  Anton  Stingl, 
guitar,  Serge  Collet,  viola  /  Boulez 
(Turn.  TV  340813) 

9:30  MUSIC  OF  THE  WORLD'S  PEO- 
PLES A  re-run  of  the  extraordinary 
series  by  the  late  Dr.  Henry  Cowell. 
From  WBAI's   Archives. 

10:00  GOLDEN  VOICES  Great  voices 
from  the  past,  presented  by  the  late 
Anthony  Boucher. 

10:30  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  A 
rebroadcast  of   the  July   11   program. 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Ayn  Rand. 
(July  11) 

11:15  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
by  William  Mandel.  (KPFA)  (July 
13) 

11:30  JAY  WRIGHT  READS  HIS 
POEMS  AT  THE  YMHA  For  details 
see  July  12. 

12:00  SCIENCE:  THE  NEW  HUMAN- 
ISM For  details  see  July  13. 

12:45  LONDON  SCHOOL  OF  CONTEM- 
PORARY DANCE  (KPFA)  For  de- 
tails see  July  13. 

1:30  THE  SENTINEL  by  Arthur  C. 
Clarke.  (KPFK)  For  details  see  July 
12. 

2:00  THE  PLANNING  PROFESSIONS 
AGAINST    THE    WAR    Lewis    Mum- 


ford,  Cong.  James  H.  Scheuer,  J.  Max 
Bond,  Paul  Davidoff,  Mario  Salvadori 
and  Garrett  Eckbo  speak  on  the  waste 
of  the  Vietnamese  war  in  the  face  of 
the  needs  of  U.  S.  society.  Percival 
Goodman  is  the  moderator  and  intro- 
duces the  speakers.  (July  25) 

4:00  NIGHT  INTO  DAY  A  gob  of  Fass. 

5:00  THE  NEXT  FIFTY  YEARS  #7 
Carl  Feiss  of  the  American  Institute 
of  Planners  talks  on  The  History  of 
American  Physical  Planning.  From 
AIP   conference. 

5:30  CHRISTMAS  DECORATIONS  The 
short  story  by  Malcolm  Hazel,  read 
by    Patricia    Field.    (BBC)     (July    21) 

5:45  COUNTRY  MUSIC  God  made  the 
country  and  man  made  the  town. 
Now,  songs  of  the  former,  produced 
by  T.  Whitmore.   (July  20) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  THEATER  REVIEW  In  the  unlike- 
ly event  that  Isaiah  Sheffer  is  in  New 
York  during  July,  he  will  review  a 
play.  It  is  more  likely  that  this  will 
be  a  Miscellany.    (July  17) 

7:00  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Ellen  Jaffe,  the  coordinator  of 
WBAI's  Programs  for  Young  Peo- 
ple, reviews  recent  juvenile  books,  i.e., 
books  for  juveniles.    (July   15) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike,  a  staff  member  of  the  Cen- 
ter for  the  Study  of  Democratic  In- 
stitutions.   (July   15) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(July  15) 

7:45  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester, 
SNCC  leader  and  Guardian  columnist, 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist  about  the 
movement.   (July  15) 

8:15  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  A  week- 
ly  round-up    of   reviews    in    the    arts. 


Photograph  by  Bob  Anderson 


Page    12 


WB 


P 


Likely  participants  tonight  are:  Mar- 
tin Last  for  art  and  architecture,  Ron 
Nelson  for  theater,  Al  Lees  for  mo- 
vies and  Baird  Searles  for  moderation. 
(July  15) 

9:00  THE  PIANO  ROLL  BLUES  From 
the  Stanford  Archive  of  Recorded 
Sound,  an  hour  of  popular  and  clas- 
sical music  recorded  on  piano  rolls  in 
the  1920's  and  played  on  Stanford's 
Steinway-Duo  Art  piano.  Included  are 
works  by  Prokofiev  performed  by  the 
composer,  popular  tunes  such  as  Oh 
Miss  Hannah  and  Cecilia,  and  com- 
positions by  Chopin,  Mendelssohn  and 
Rachmaninoff,  performed  by  Josef 
Hofman  and  Ethel  Leginska.  (KPFA) 
(July  18) 

10:00  THE  EVOLUTION  MAN  #8  Frank 
Coffee  reads  the  last  episode  of  the 
book  by  Roy  Lewis  about  ape-men 
and   modern   civilization.    (July   16) 

10:30  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD 
Views,  news  and  issues  with  Tana 
de  Gamez.    (July  16) 

11:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  Ira  Git- 
ler  will  not  play  golden  gassers.  (July 
18) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  with  Steve  Post. 
He  that  falls  in  love  with  himself  has 
no  rivals. 


MONDAY,  JULY  15 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Does  the  sun 
rise  to  hear   Larry  crow? 

9:00  STRING  QUARTETS  MOZART 
Quartet  #19  in  C  Major,  K.  465 
("Dissonant")  Juilliard  Quartet  (Vic. 
LM  2167)  VITEZSLAV  NOVAK 
Quartet  in  G  Major,  Op.  22  Novak 
Quartet  (Cross.  22  16  0048)  BARTOK 
Quartet  #4  (1928)  Juilliard  Quartet 
(Col.   ML  4279) 

10:15  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  by  Hugh 
Romney.    (July   12) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike.    (July  14) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  YAF.   (July  14) 

11:00  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist.   (July  14) 

11:30  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  by 
Sam  Julty.   (July  13) 

12:00  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  What's 
new  in  the  arts  this  week.  (July  14) 

12:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  Friday  night's  pro- 
gram. 

1:45  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Ellen  Jaffe  on  juveniles.  (July 
14) 

2:00  FROM  THE  MIDWAY  #1217  Ed- 
gar Brookes,  Prof,  of  History  and 
Political  Science  at  the  Univ.  of  Na- 
tal, speaks  on  The  Economic  Conse- 
quences of  Apartheid  and  Crawford 
Young,  Prof,  of  Political  Science  at 
the  Univ.  of  Wisconsin,  discusses  The 
Congo   Rebellion   Revisited. 

3:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  by  the  cos- 
mopolitan E.  Vandermei.  (July  10) 


4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  The 
Land  of  Green  Ginger  A  rebroadcast 
of  Noel  Langley  reading  his  story  of 
what  happened  after  Aladdin  rubbed 
the  lamp.  This  is  the  first  installment; 
the  others  follow  on  Wednesday,  Fri- 
day and  Monday  and  next  Wednes- 
day. 
5:00  MUSIC  FOR  OBOE  #4  Attributed 
to  HAYDN  Concerto  in  C  Major  for 
Oboe  and  Orchestra  Helmut  Hucke, 
oboe;  Consortium  Musicum/Fritz  Le- 
han  (Mace  MS  9040)  MOZART  Con- 
certo in  C  Major  for  Oboe  and  Or- 
chestra, K.  314  John  de  Lancie,  oboe; 
Philadelphia  Orch./Ormandy  (Col.  ML 
5852)  Quartet  in  F  Major  for  Oboe 
and  Strings,  K.  370  Heinz  Holliger, 
oboe;  Pascal  Quartet  (Mon.  MCS 
2115)  Quintet  in  E-Flat  Major  for 
Piano,  Oboe,  Clarinet,  Horn  and  Bas- 
soon, K.  452  Walter  Gieseking,  piano; 
Sidney  Sutcliffe,  oboe;  Bernard  Wal- 
ton, clarinet;  Dennis  Brain,  horn;  Ce- 
cil James,  bassoon  (Ang.  35303)  (July 
17) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn, 
author  of  How  to  Stay  Out  of  the 
Draft.    (July    16) 

7:15  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh,  teacher  and  language  ex- 
pert.   (July   16) 

7:30  SCRAPS  BitsofChrisAlberton'sun- 
consciousdrift   by.    (July   16) 

7:45  LETTERS  FROM  CONSTANTINO- 
PLE #3  Eighteenth-century  epistler 
Lady  Mary  Wortley  Montagu,  wife  of 
Edward  Montagu,  diplomat  and  au- 
thor, was  endowed  with  beauty,  charm, 
wit,  and  intelligence.  Lady  Mary  was 
immortalized  for  the  inspiration  and 
subject  matter  of  her  fascinating  let- 
ters to  her  sister  and  her  daughter. 
Actress  Kathleen  Dalton  reads  the 
third,  and  final,  installment  in  a  series 
devoted  to  these  letters,  which  were 
written  from  the  Near  East  during 
the  early  eighteenth  century.  (July  17) 

8:15  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #7  A 
continuation  of  the  series  on  folk  art 
presented  by  Ralph  Rinzler.  (July  16) 

8:45  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS:  The 
Bench,  a  panel  discussion  on  court 
procedures  in  New  York,  moderated 
by  David  Rothenberg  of  the  Fortune 
Society.   (July  16) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  One 
of  the  hours  left  open  for  a  program 
of  immediate  importance  from  the 
News  and  Public  Affairs  Dept.  (July 
16) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Shaf- 
fer.   (July  16) 

11:00  CESAR  CHAVEZ  speaking  May 
16  at  City  College  in  N.Y.C.  Mr.  Cha- 
vez is  the  director  of  the  United  Farm 
Workers. 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
praises  loudly  and  blames   softly. 


TUESDAY,  JULY  16 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  with  Larry 
Josephson.  Who  listens  once  will  lis- 
ten twice. 

9:00  STRING  QUARTETS  HAYDN 
Quartet  in  C  Major,  Op.  74,  #1  Juil- 
liard Quartet  (Vic.  LM  2168)  ALBERT 
ROUSSEL  Quartet  in  D  Major  Loe- 
wenguth  Quartet  (Vox  SVBX  570) 
SCHOENBERG  Quartet  #4,  Op.  37 
(1936)  Juilliard  Quartet  (Col.  MY 
4737)    (July   29) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  15) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn. 
(July  15) 

10:45  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh.    (July  15) 

11:00  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS  A 
discussion   on   The   Bench.    (July  15) 

11:30  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #7 
Presented  by  Ralph  Rinzler.  (July  15) 

12:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  15  program. 

1:00  SCRAPS  of  Christ  Albertson  (July 
15) 

1:15  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD  by 
Tana  de  Gamez.   (July  14) 

1:45  THE  EVOLUTION  MAN  #8  Frank 
Coffee  ends  his  reading  of  the  book 
by  Roy  Lewis.   (July  14) 

2:15  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  The  Politics 
of  Urban  Education  The  first  of  four 
programs  from  a  conference  on  urban 
affairs  in  Newark.  For  more  details, 
see  July  13. 

3:15  AMERICAN  COLONIAL  MUSIC 
For  details,  see  July  4. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Tune  to  Tuesday's  Child,  followed  by 
an  interview  with  Beni  Montressor, 
author  of  I  Saw  A  Ship  Asailing  and 
other  books.  (Pathways  to  Children's 
Literature    Series) 

5:00  PIANO  MUSIC  BY  CHOPIN  Noc- 
turne in  E  Minor,  Op.  72,  #1;  Mazur- 
ka in  B  Minor,  Op.  33,  #4  Vladimir 
Horowitz  (Col.  M2S  757)  Etude  in  C 
Minor,  Op.  10,  #12;  Etude  in  C-Sharp 
Minor,  Op.  25,  #7;  Scherzo  #1  in  B 
Minor,  Op.  20  Horowitz  (Col.  ML 
5941)  Scherzo  #4  in  E  Major,  Op.  54; 
Nocturne  in  D  Flat,  Op.  27,  #2  Jeanne 
Marie  Darre  (Van.  VRS-1162)  Sonata 
#3  in  B  Minor,  Op.  58  Vladimir  Ash- 
kenazy   (Angel  35648) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul   Schaffer 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant,  Legislative  Director  of  the  N.Y. 
chapter  of  the  ACLU.   (July  17) 

7:15  CAN  THE  NEGATIVE  INCOME 
TAX  REPLACE  EXISTING  WEL- 
FARE PROGRAMS?  The  economist 
Stephen  Sobotka  discusses  the  feas- 
ability  of  replacing  present  welfare 
programs  with  a  negative  incme  tax, 
and  discusses  changes  that  would  have 
to  be  made  in  the  present  schedule 
of  deductions  in  order  to  assure  ade- 
quate benefits  to  poor  people.  (July 
18) 


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7:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
"Jack  Armstrong — All  American  Boy" 

Richard  Lamparski  talks  with  the 
original,  Jim  Ameche.   (July  17) 

8:00  LISTENING  BACK  #10  A  tribute 
to  Sir  Harry  Lauder,  from  Bob 
Brown's  collection  of  recordings,  in 
which  thel  Scots  author,  composer, 
vaudevillian,  and  comedian  sings  his 
own  songs  back  to  the  turn  of  the 
century.   (July  17) 

8:30  THE  MOVIES  Bob  Sitton  and  a 
guest.    (July  18) 

9:00  MISCELLANY 

9:15  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT:  Behind  the  Walls  — 
Ritual  and  Death  Personal  accounts  by 
penologists  and  psychiatrists  of  the 
price  the  death  penalty  exacts  from 
the  living.  From  the  Center  for  the 
Study  of  Democratic  Institutions 
#412    (July   17) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 


10:30  NEWS    with    Paul    Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Shaf 
fer.    (July   17) 

11:00  THE  MARIAN  McPARTLAN^ 
PROGRAM  Jazz  —  mostly  soft  and 
sweet  —  presented  by  the  lovely  lady 
pianist.    (July   17) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass.  Love  in  a  cramped  studio  with 
no    working   air    conditioning. 


WEDNESDAY,  JULY  17 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  A  one-man 
saturnalia,  egged  on  under  the  cho- 
lesterol yolk  by  vats   of  oleo. 

9:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #4 
See  July  15  listing  for  details. 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.    (July    16) 

10:30   WHATEVER   BECAME   OF   .   .   . 


"Jack  Armstrong — All  American  Boy" 

Richard  Lamparski,  interviewer.  For 
details,  see  July  16. 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant    (July    16) 

11:15  LISTENING  BACK  #10  Bob 
Brown  with  old  music.   (July  16) 

11:45  THEATER  REVIEW  Isaiah  Shef- 
fer  on  the  most  interesting  of  the 
recent   plays.    (July    14) 

12:00  LA  SALLE  STRING  QUARTET 
Works  by  Purcell,  Lutoslawski,  and 
Beethoven.  For  more  details,  see  July 
13. 

1:30  LETTERS  FROM  CONSTANTINO- 
PLE #3  For  details,  see  July  15. 

2:00  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT:  Behind  the  Walls  — 
Ritual  and  Death.  From  the  Center 
for  the  Study  of  Democratic  Institu- 
tions #412   (July  16) 

3:00  THE  MARIAN  Mc  PARTLAND 
PROGRAM  Jazz  —  mostly  soft  and 
sweet  —  presented  by  the  beautiful 
lady  pianist.   (July  16) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAMS 
The  Land  of  Green  Ginger.  Part  2. 

5:00  ITALIAN  BAROQUE  VOCAL  MU- 
SIC GIACOMO  CARISSIMI  (1605- 
1674)  Oratorio:  Judicium  Salomonis 
Elizabeth  Speiser,  Barbara  Lange,  so- 
pranos; Kurt  Huber,  tenor;  Gunther 
Wilhelms,  bass  Spandauer  Kantorei/ 
Rilling  (Turn.  TV  34089  S).  (July 
22) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de   Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of  the 
Students  for  a  Democratic  Society. 
(July  18) 

7:15  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  by  Andrew  Sar- 
ds, Film  Critic  for  the  Village  Voice. 
(July  19) 

7:45  EXPERIMENTAL  CITIES  Athel- 
stan  Spilhaus,  President  of  the  Frank- 
lin Institute,  speaks  on  his  projected 
"new"  cities  in  which  waste  will  be 
controlled.  A  SIPI  Lecture  given  at 
the  New  School.  Produced  by  Bob 
Anderson.    (July  18) 

8:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.   (July  18) 

9:45  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #14  A  conti- 
nuation of  the  series  from  the  jour- 
nals and  correspondence  of  Fanny 
Calderon  de  la  Barca,  the  wife  of 
Spain's  first  envoy  to  the  Republic  of 
Mexico.  Read  by  WBAI's  Fredi  Dun- 
dee.   (July  18) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  18) 

11:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  Music  of 
the  avant-garde,  mostly  jazz,  with 
Elisabeth  Vandermei.    (July  22) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  R.  Fass 
exercises  vital  organs  and  might,  if 
you  will,  pull  out  all  the  stops.  Will 
you? 


Photograph  by  Jim   Bivona 


WBAI 


Page    15 


THURSDAY,  JULY  18 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  pro- 
poses Teflon  as  a  possible  solution 
to  the  problem  of  the  Greasy  Volun- 
teer. 

9:00  MUSIC  OF  NIELS  GADE  (1817- 
1890)  Echoes  of  Ossian  Overture,  Op. 
1  Royal  Danish  Orchestra/Johan  Hye- 
Knudsen  (Turn.  TV  34085S);  Quar- 
tet in  D,  Op.  63  Copenhagen  Quartet 
(Turn.  TV  34187);  Symphony  #1  in 
C,  Op.  5  Royal  Danish  Orch  /Johan 
Hye-Knudsen  (Turn.  TV  3  40  52  S) 
(July   31) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf 
fer. 

10:30  THE  MOVIES  Bob  Sitton  inter- 
views a  guest  and  talks  about  some  re- 
cent film.    (July  16) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
Students  for  a  Democratic  Society. 
(July  17) 

11:15  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #14  A  con- 
tinuation of  the  20-part  series  of  read- 
ings from  the  journals  and  corre- 
spondence of  Fanny  Calderon  de  la 
Barca.    (July   17) 

11:45  CAN  THE  NEGATIVE  INCOME 
TAX  REPLACE  EXISTING  WEL- 
FARE PROGRAMS?  A  talk  by  econo- 
mist Stephen  Sobotka.  For  details,  see 
July  16. 


12:00  THE  PIANO  ROLL  BLUES  Pop- 
ular and  classical  music  of  the  1920's 
recorded  on  piano  rolls.  (KPFA)  For 
more  details,  see  July  14. 

1:00  EXPERIMENTAL  CITIES  A  speech 
by  Athelstan  Spilhaus,  President  of 
the  Franklin  Institute.  For  more  de- 
tails, see  July  17. 

2:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  last  night's  program. 

3:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  presented 
by  Ira   Gitler.    (July  14) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAMS 
Sail   away   with   Watkins    Rock. 

5:00  MEDIEVAL  MUSIC  For  details, 
see  July  1  listing. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS   by   Paul    Schaffer. 

7:00  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER 
WBAI's  General  Manager,  Friendly 
Frank,   on  Finances.    (July  21) 

7:15  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
A  weekly  report  on  what  goes  on 
around  town,  with  Sandy  Margolin. 
(July   19) 

7:30  OF  UNICORNS  AND  UNIVERSES 
Baird  Searles  (and  aides)  in  their  bi- 
weekly survey  of  books,  magazines 
and  performances  in  the  fields  of  sci- 
ence   fiction    and   fantasy.    (July   21) 

7:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  Stevenson 
Phillips,  actor,  storyteller,  writer  and 
folknik  presents  songs,  stories  and 
meanderings  across  the  American 
continent.    (July  19). 


Photograph   by  Jim   Bivona 

8:15  FIVE  BLACK  REPORTERS  TALK 
ABOUT  RIOT  COVERAGE  Negro  re- 
porters, representing  the  Times,  News- 
day,  Newsweek,  the  N.  Y.  Post,  WINS 

and  WMCA  discuss  riot  reporting  as 
they  see  it.  Produced  and  moderated 
by  Kay  Lindsey.   (July  20) 

9:15  TALK  BACK  Live  discussion  of  a 
current  event,  book,  article,  or  hap- 
pening, followed  by  a  period  in  which 
listeners  can  call  in  and  express  their 
opinions.  The  number  to  call  is  OX  7- 
8506. 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  by  Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July   19) 

11:00  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  A  story 
by  Stanley  Weyman,  about  Gilles  de 
Berault.  (BBC)  This  is  part  3.  (July 
19) 

11:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  Chris  Albert- 
son  with  early  jazz  chez  lui.  (July  20) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  pre- 
sents a  chalk  talk  on  Audio  Nudity. 
Another  in  a  continuing  series  on  the 
limitations   of  the   medium. 


FRIDAY,  JULY  19 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  Jos- 
ephson  quarrels  with  his  bagels  and 
butter. 


Page    16 


WBAP 


9:00    MUSIC     FOR    THE    OBOE     #  5 

ROBERT  SCHUMANN  (1810-1856) 
Three  Romances  for  Oboe  and  Piano, 
Op.  94  Harry  Shulman,  oboe  (Lyr. 
7193);  JEAN  SIBELIUS  (1865-1957) 
The  Swan  of  Tuonela,  Op.  22,  #3 
Gerhard  Stumpnik,  English  horn/Ber- 
lin Philharmonic  /  Karajan  Deutsche 
Gramaphon  DGG  139016);  CHARLES 
MARTIN  LOEFFER  (1861-1935)  Two 
Rhapsodies  for  Oboe,  Viola  and  Pia- 
no Harold  Gomberg,  oboe;  Milton 
Katims,  viola;  Dimitri  Mitropoulos, 
piano  (Col.  ML  5306);  RICHARD 
DONOVAN  (1891-  )  Suite  for  String 
Orchestra  and  Oboe  Alfred  Genovese, 
oboe;  Baltimore  Symphony/Reginald 
Stewart  (Van.  VRS  468)  (July  22) 
10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 

fer.    (July  18) 

10:30  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  Part  3 

of  a  story  by  Stanley  Weyman,  about 

Gilles    de   Berault.    (BBC)    (July    18) 

11:00  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  with  Andrew 

Sarris.   (July  17) 
11 :30  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 

(July  18) 
11:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  Music, 
stories,  rambles  with  Stevenson  Phil- 
lips. (July  18) 
12:15  BOMARZO;  BY  ALBERTO  GINA- 
STERA  Mr.  Ginastera's  new  opera, 
followed  by  interviews  with  the  com- 
poser and  others.  For  details,  see  July 
6. 
4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM  The 
Land  of  Green  Ginger  (Part  3).  The 
search  for  the  magic  bird  continues. 
5:00  ELIZABETHAN  MUSIC  THOMAS 
CAMPION  Songs  from  Rosseter's 
'Book  of  Ayres'  Rene  Soames,  tenor; 
Walter  Gerwig,  flute;  Johannes  Koch, 
viola  da  gamba  (Arch.  ARC  3004) 
ORLANDO  GIBBONS  O  Lord,  I  Lift 
My  Heart  to  Thee;  Almighty  and 
Everlasting  God;  O  Lord,  Increase  My 
Faith;  This  is  the  Record  of  John, 
Thus  Angels  Sung;  O  My  Love,  How 
Comely;  Fantasia  I;  Fantasia:  'In  No- 
mine' Deller  Consort,  Consort  of  Viols 
of  the  Schola  Cantorum  Basiliensis 
(Arc.  ARC  3053)  WILLIAM  BYRD 
Mass  for  Four  Voices  The  Bach 
Choral  Society  of  Montreal  /  George 
Little. 
6:15  MISCELLANY 
6:30  NEWS   with   Paul    Schaffer.    Latin 

America:  Tana  de  Gamez. 
7:00    A    SATIRICAL    VIEW    of    recent 
events  by  Marshall   Efron.    (July  22) 
7:15    COMMENTARY    by    Will    Brady. 

(July  20) 
7:30   SPECIAL    REPORT   An   event   of 
interest,  examined  in  detail.  (July  20) 
8:00  LITTLE  WIDE  AWAKE  Excerpts 
from    Victorian    children's    magazines 
and   books.    Compiled   by   Leonard   de 
Vries,  and  read  by  Rosemary  Ander- 
son,   Sara    Dalton,    Al    Norton,    and 
Baird  Searles.  Includes  Victorian  mu- 
sic illustrating  the  themes.   Produced 
by  Ellen  Jaffe.   (July  20) 
8:30  LEE  ANDERSON  READS  FROM 
HIS  WORK  In  this  Yale  series  of  Re- 


corded Poets  Lee  Anderson  reads  his 
four-part  poem  "Nags  Head"  which 
he  began  at  the  site  of  the  Wright 
Brothers'  first  flight  at  Nags  Head, 
N.  C.  Lee  Anderson  is  a  believer  in 
the  great  oral  tradition  of  poetry 
and  this  work  is  meant  to  be  heard, 
to  circumvent  the  eye.  (Decca)  (July 
21) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.    (July  22) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  20) 

10:30  NEWS 

11:00  A  CONCERT  FROM  RADIO 
NEDERLAND  Paul  Hupperts  con- 
ducts the  Utrecht  Symphony  Orches- 
tra. ANDRIESSEN  Ricecare  (1940) 
TCHAIKOVSKY  Symphony  No.  5  in 
E,  Op.  64  (KPFA)    (July  21) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
has  tears  and  prepares  to  shed  them 
now. 


SATURDAY,  JULY  20 


8:00  17th  CENTURY  ENGLISH  MU- 
SIC ORLANDO  GIBBONS  Thus  An- 
gels Sung;  Fantasias  1  to  3;  Almigh- 
ty and  Everlasting  God;  Oh  My  Love, 
How  Comely  Deller  Consort,  Viol  Con- 
sort of  the  Schola  Basiliensis  (Arc. 
3053)  HENRY  PURCELL  Sonatas  of  3 
Parts,  Nos.  1-6  Jacobean  Ensemble/ 
Dart  (Sp.  Arts  209)  WILLIAM  BYRD 
Lullaby,  My  Sweet  Little  Baby,  My 
Sweet  Little  Darling  RICHARD 
NICHOLSON  In  a  Merry  May  Morn 
ROBERT  PARSONS  Pandolpho  AL- 
FONSO FERRABOSCO  Viol  Fantasy 
in  G  Major  BYRD  Come,  Pretty  Babe 
ANON.  O  Death,  Rock  Me  Asleep  Al- 
fred Deller,  countertenor;  Wenziger 
Consort  of  Viols  of  the  Schola  Can- 
torum Basiliensis  /  Wenzinger  (BG - 
557) 

9:30  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Time  for  Ronny  Watkins  to  read  and 
talk. 

10:30  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  19) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July  19) 

11:00  SPECIAL  REPORT  A  rebroad- 
cast  of  the  July  19  program. 

11:30  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Mr.  Whit- 
more's  July   14  production. 

12:00  FIVE  BLACK  REPORTERS  TALK 
ABOUT  RIOT  COVERAGE  Negro  re- 
porters, representing  various  mass 
media,  discuss  riot  reporting  as  they 
see  it.  For  more  details  see  July  18. 

1:00  JAZZ  AT  HOME  A  rebroadcast 
of  Mr.  Albertson's  July  18  program. 
(July  18) 

1:30  LITTLE  WIDE  AWAKE  Excerpts 
from  Victorian  magazines  and  books. 
For  more  details  see  July  19. 


2:00    FOLK    MUSIC    TODAY    Israel 

Young  and  fellow  folk  in  their  bi- 
weekly festival. 
4:00  A  TRIBUTE  TO  ELLA  BAKER 
The  Southern  Conference  Education 
Fund's  annual  dinner  (held  in  April) 
honored  Miss  Ella  Baker,  who  has 
worked  for  many  years  behind  the 
scenes  in  the  Civil  Rights  Movement. 
Speakers  include  Floyd  McKissick. 
Stokely  Carmichael,  Carl  Braden,  and 
Ella  Baker. 
5:00  SAPPHO  The  lyrics  of  the  ancient 
Greek  poetess  are  perfrmed  by  Beryl 
Grafton,  with  improvised  accompani- 
ment on  the  harp  by  poet  Daniel  Moore. 
(KPFA)  (July  23) 
5:30  CONDUCTORS  IN  REHEARSAL 
John  Rockwell  presents  Sir  Thomas 
Beecham  conducting  the  Royal  Phil- 
harmonic Orchestra  in  rehearsals  of 
Haydn's  Symphonies  100  and  104.  The 
program  will  conclude  with  a  complete 
performance  of  the  Symphony  No. 
104.  These  recordings  are  not  com- 
mercially available  in  the  United 
States.  (KPFA)  (July  23) 
6:15  MISCELLANY 
6:30  NEWS 

6:45  GENESIS  OF  A  NATION:  The  Ties 
That   Bind   The  federal  union   of  the 
British   colonies  of  North  America  is 
dramatized.   (CBC) 
7:15  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  Sam 
Julty   gathers    nuts    in    July.    (July 
22) 
7 :30  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
William    Mandell,    author    of    Russia 
Re-Examined,  discusses  current  Soviet 
periodicals.    (KPFA)'  (July   21) 
7:45    CLIFFORD     MASON    The    play- 
wright and  critic  discusses  the  theater 
and   motion    pictures   from    the   point 
of  view  of  the  minority.  (July  24) 
8:15  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  New   Ca- 
reers for  the  Poor  The  second  of  four 
programs  recorded  in  April   at  New- 
ark   State    College.    Today's   panelists 
are  Mr.  Lloyd  Feinstein,  administrator 
of  the  Kilmer  Job  Corps  Center,  Mr. 
Fred   Marder,   administrator  of   New- 
ark   State    College,   and   Dr.    Bernard 
Flicker,  director  of  the  Teacher  Corps, 
Hunter  College.   (July  21) 
9:15    THE    MIND'S    EYE    THEATRE: 
Boy  in  Darkness  A  dramatic  reading 
of  the  story  by  Mervyn  Peake,  being 
another    adventure    of    Titus    Groan, 
hero  of  the  Gormenghast  trilogy.  Ven- 
turing   into    a    trackless    waste    from 
his  ancestral  castle,  Titus  falls  in  with 
two  villains,  a  hyena  and  a  goat,  who 
deliver  him  into  the  hands  of  one  of 
the    most    blood-curdling    of    literary 
villains,  a  white  lamb.  The  voices  are 
those  of  Sara  Dalton,   Cliff  May,  Al- 
bert Norton,  and  Gordon  Spencer,  and 
the  narrator  is  Mitchell  Taylor.  Per- 
mission'for  use  was  granted  by  Maeve 
Peake,  and  the  story  is  published  by 
Ballantine   Books.   Technical  direction 
by   David    Rapkin;    produced   and   di- 
rected by  Baird  Searles.  (July  26) 
12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  Steve   Post  does 
ckoose  to  b"i'  eggs  in  his  shoes. 


WBAI 


Page    17 


SUNDAY,  JULY  21 


8:60  MUSIC  OF  JOHANN  NEPOMUK 
HUMMEL  (1778-1837)  Fantasy  in  G 
Minor   for    Viola,   Two   Clarinets   and 

Strings  Ernst  Wallfisch,  viola;  Wurt- 
temberg  Chamber  Orch./Jbrg  Faerber 
(Turn.  TV  34079S)  Double  Concerto 
in  G  Major  for  Piano,  Violin  and  Or- 
chestra Martin  Galling,  piano;  Su- 
sanne  Lautenbacher,  violin;  Stuttgart 
Philharmonic  /  Alexander  Paulmiiller 
(Turn.  TV  34028S)  Septet  in  D  Minor, 
Op.  74  Richard  Adeney,  flute;  Peter 
Graeme,  oboe;  Neill  Sanders,  horn; 
Cecil  Aronowitz,  viola;  Terence  Weil, 
cello;  Adrian  Beers,  double  bass;  La- 
mar Crowson,  piano  (L'Oiseau  -  Lyre 
OL  290)  Concerto  in  E  Major  for 
Trumpet  and  Orchestra  Armando  Ghi- 
talla,  trumpet;  Boston  Chamber  En- 
semble/Monteux  Cam.  (CRM  819) 

9:30  MUSIC  OF  THE  WORLD'S  PEO- 
PLE Ethnic  music,  presented  by  the 
late  Dr.  Henry  Cowell;  from  the 
WBAI  Archives. 

10:00  GOLDEN  VOICES  A  continuation 
of  the  series  by  the  late  Anthony  Bou- 
cher. (KPFA) 

10:30  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER 
See  July   18  for  details. 

10:45  OF  UNICORNS  AND  UNIVERSES 
Science  fiction  and  fantasy  reviews. 
(July   18) 

11:00  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
by  Wm.   Mandel.    (KPFA)    (July  20) 

11:15  LEE  ANDERSON  READS  FROM 
HIS  WORK  For  details,  see  listing 
for  July  19. 

12:00  A  CONCERT  FROM  RADIO 
NEDERLAND  Works  by  Andriessen 
and  Tchaikovsky.    (KPFA)    (July   19) 

1:00  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  New  Ca- 
reers for  the  Poor  The  second  of  four 
programs  on  urban  problems.  Details 
listed  July  20. 


2:00  AN  INTERVIEW  WITH  SUN  RA 
The  black  musician  talks  with  Dennis 
Irving,  including  subjects  quite  sep- 
arate from  music. 

3:00  RADIO  HAPPENING  #2  The  sec- 
ond of  five  conversations  between 
John  Cage  and  Morton  Feldman.  (July 
31) 

4:00  NIGHT  INTO  DAY  A  piece  of 
Fass. 

5:00  THE  NEXT  FIFTY  YEARS  #8 
Dr.  Robert  C.  Wood,  of  the  Dept.  of 
Housing  and  Urban  Development,  on 
The  Development  of  Administrative 
and  Political  Planning  in  America. 
From  the  American  Institute  of  Plan- 
ners conference. 

5:30  CHRISTMAS  DECORATIONS  A 
short  story  by  Malcolm  Hazel.  (BBC) 
(July  14) 

5:45  COUNTRY  MUSIC  The  avant- 
garde  in  truly  rural  sounds,  produced 
by  Tom  Whitmore.    (July  27) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  BORIS  KARLOFF  The  famous 
actor  talks  with  Derek  Parker  of  the 
BBC.   (July  24) 

7:00  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  T.  H.  White,  the  biography 
by  Sylvia  Townsend  Warner  (Viking) 
and  Homosexuality  and  Creative  Ge- 
nius by  Dr.  Hendrik  M.  Huitenbeck 
are  reviewed  by  Baird  Searles.  (July 
22) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike,  a  member  of  the  staff  of  the 
Center  for  the  Study  of  Democratic 
Institutions.    (July   22) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(July  22) 

7:45  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester, 
SNCC  leader  and  Guardian  columnist 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist  about  the 
movement.    (July  22) 

8:15  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  Reviews 
of   the    week    in    the    arts.    Likely   to 


speak  are  Ruth  Ramsay  for  music, 
Deborah  Jowitt  for  dance,  Martin 
Last  for  art  and  architecture  and 
Baird  Searles  for  moderation.  (July 
22) 

9:00  HERBERT  MARCUSE  The  author 
of  Eros  and  Civilization  and  One  Di- 
mensional Man  speaks  on  "The  New 
Man,  The  New  Culture."  The  speech 
was  sponsored  by  the  NYU  Committee 
to  End  the  War  and  the  Guardian. 
(July  28) 

10:30  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD 
News  and  views  by  Tana  de  Gamez. 
(July   23) 

11:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  with  Don 
Schlitten.  (July  25) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  Steve  Post  washes 
with    oriental    scrupulosity. 


MONDAY,  JULY  22 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  the 
J.   on  the  burning   deck. 

9:00  ITALIAN  BAROQUE  VOCAL  MU- 
SIC GIACOMO  CARISSIMI  Oratorio: 
Judicium  Salomonis  Elizabeth  Speiser, 
Barbara  Lange,  sopranos;  Kurt  Hu- 
ber,  tenor;  Giinther  Wilhelm,  bass; 
Spandauer  Kantorei  /  Helmuth  Rilling 
(Turn.  TV  34089S)  ANTONIO  CAL- 
DARA  Christmas  Cantata  Gertraut 
Stoklassa,  Marlee  Sabo,  sopranos;  In- 
geborg  Russ,  alto;  Georg  Jelden,  te- 
nor; Wurttenberg  Chamber  Orches- 
tra. Heilbronn/Ewerhardt  (Turn.  TV 
34096S)     (July    17) 

10:15  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  by  Mar- 
shall Efron.    (July  19) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.   Pike.    (July  21) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(July  21) 

11:00  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester 
interview.    (July   21) 


WHEN  THE  MUSIC'S 
OVER 


POSTERS  THAT 

GOON 

AND  ON 

AND  ON 

AND  ON 

These    posters   are    printed   on   heavy 
embossed  paper,  suitable  for  framing. 


Send  check  or  m.o.  to: 

OVERGROUND  ART,  INC. 

P.O.  Box  373 

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Page    18 


WBAI 


11:30  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  by 
Sam  Julty.   (July  20) 

11:45  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  Re- 
views in  art  and  leisure.  (July  21) 

12:30  LEWIS  CARROLL  AND  ALICE 
A   talk   by   Roger   Green.    (BBC) 

12:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  19  program. 

1:45  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  Baird  Searles  on  recent  books. 
(July   21) 

2:00  FROM  THE  MIDWAY  #1218  Sey- 
mour Martin  Lipset,  Prof,  in  the  Dept. 
of  Government  and  Social  Relations 
at  Harvard,  speaks  on  The  Social 
Context  of  the  Wallace  Campaign  and 
the  Radical. 

3:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  A  rebroad- 
cast of  Elisabeth  Vandermei's  July 
17    program. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
The  Land  of  Green  Ginger;  Part  4 
read   by  the   author,  Noel  Langley. 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #5  For 
complete  details,  see  listing  for  July 
19. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de   Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn, 
attorney  to  the  revolutionary  left. 
(July  23) 

7:15  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh,  teacher  and  language  ex- 
pert.   (July  23) 

7:30  SCRAPS  A  rebroadcast  of  Chris 
Albertson's  program  of  Dec.  11,  1888. 
(July  23) 

7:45  MAN  THE  EXPLORER  OF  LIFE 
A  discussion  of  the  "New  Biology" 
by  four  participants,  three  of  whom 
were  involved  with  pavilions  at  Expo 
'67  based  on  this  theme.  (CBC)  (July 
24) 

8:15  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #8 
Ralph  Rinzler  continues  the  series  on 
little-known  primitive  music.  (July 
23) 

8:45  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS:  The 
Youth  Houses  A  discussion  on  pre  - 
teen  delinquency  moderated  by  David 
Rothenberg  of  the  Fortune  Society 
(July  23) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate interest  from  the  News  and 
Public  Affairs  Dept.   (July  23) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  23) 

11:00  THB^NEW  SYMPOSIUM:  A  Pro- 
gram From  and  For  the  Homosexual 
Community  The  first  of  a  26-week  se- 
ries of  programs  will  explain  the  pur- 
poses of  the  program  and  introduce 
the  personnel  who  will  be  on  for  the 
duration.    (July  23) 

11:30  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #2 
Polka  and  rustic  instruments.  (July 
24) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass,  where  the  .probable  never  hap- 
pens  but  the   impossible  often  does. 


TUESDAY,  JULY  23 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  with  Larry 
Josephson.  Many  call  but  few  are 
chosen. 

9:00  20th  CENTURY  MUSIC  STEFAN 
WOLPE  Sonata  for  Violin  and  Piano 
Frances  Magnes,  violin;  David  Tudor, 
piano  Quartet  Bob  Nagel,  trumpet; 
Al  Cohn,  tenor  saxophone;  Al  How- 
ard, percussion;  Jack  Maxin,  piano  / 
Samuel  Baron  (Eso.  ES-530)  WIL- 
LIAM MAYER  Country  Fair  (1957) 
Robert  Nagel  Brass  Trio  (CRI  185) 
Piano  Sonata  (1960)  William  Masse- 
los,  piano  (CRI  198)  Essay  for  Brass 
and  Winds  (1954)  N.  Y.  Brass  and 
Woodwind  Ensemble/Emmanuel  Bala- 
ban   (CRI   185) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  22) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn. 
(July  22) 

10:45  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh.   (July  22) 

11:00  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS: 
The  Youth  Houses  (July  22) 

11:30  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #8 
Presented  by  Ralph  Rinzler.  (July 
22) 

12:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast   of  the   July   22   program. 

1:00  SCRAPS  by  Chris  Albertson.  (July 
22) 

1:15  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD  by 
Tana   de   Gamez.    (July   21) 

1:45  THE  NEW  SYMPOSIUM:  A  Pro- 
gram From  and  For  the  Homosexual 
Community    For   details,    see  July  22. 

2:15  SAPPHO  A  reading  of  her  lyrics 
with  harp  accompaniment.  (KPFA) 
(July  20) 

2:45  CONDUCTORS  IN  REHEARSAL 
Sir  Thomas  Beecham  on  Haydn's  Sym- 
phonies 100  and  104.  For  more  details, 
see  listing  for  July  20.    (KPFA) 

3:30  A  FAREWELL  TO  STEAM  A  nos- 
talgic look  at  the  great  days  of  Ca- 
nadian railroading  before  the  coming 
of  the  diesel  engine.  (CBC)    (July  25) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Tuesday's  Child,  orchestrated  by  Bon- 
nie Tepper  and  Ed  Woodard.  Then, 
a  discussion  with  Robert  Sargent. 
(Pathways  of  Children's   Literature) 

5:00  STRING  QUARTETS  Works  by 
Mozart,  Glinka  and  Berg.  Details, 
July  9. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS   with   Paul    Schaffer. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabricant, 
Legislative  Director  of  the  N.Y.  chap- 
ter of  the  ACLU.  (July  24) 

7:15  SOME  QUESTIONS  ABOUT  THE 
NEGATIVE  INCOME  TAX  The  econo- 
mist Stephen  Sobotka  answers  some 
questions  about  how  the  negative  in- 
come tax  would  work,  whether  it  would 
be  an  adequate  replacement  for  exist- 
ing welfare  programs,  and  whether 
it  would  be  financially  feasible.  (July 
25) 

7:30   WHATEVER   BECAME   OF   .    .   . 


Leo  Gorcey?  The  leader  of  the  orig- 
inal "Dead  End  Kids"  and  "Bowery 
Boys"  tells  about  Humphrey  Bogart, 
Carole  Lombard,  Sidney  Lumet  and 
his  four  wives.  You'll  learn  the  where- 
abouts of  Huntz  Hall,  "Sunshine"  Leo 
Morrison,  "Whitey"  Bernard  Funsley 
and  Billy  Halop.  (July  24) 

8:00  LISTENING  BACK  #11  Bob  Brown 
presents  a  paradox:  Sounds  of  the 
Silent  Film.  Tune  in  to  discover  just 
what  they  could  be.   (July  24) 

8:30  THE  LETTERS  OF  JOHN  KEATS 
Peter  MacDonald  reads  a  series  of 
letters  and  excerpts  from  letters  by 
the   poet.    (KPFA)    (July   24) 

9:15  ARTS  EXTRA  A  program  or  two 
of  immediate  interest  from  the  Dra- 
ma and  Literature  Dept.    (July  24) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with   Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  24) 

11:00  SONIA  MALKINE  Troubadour 
songs  from  then  and  now  by  the  Pa- 
ris-born  recording    artist.    (July   24) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Is  Bob 
Fass  an  anvil   or  a  hammer? 


WEDNESDAY,  JULY  24 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  is  the 
very   pineapple   of   politeness. 

9:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #6  AR- 
THUR BLISS  Quintet  for  Oboe  and 
Strings  (1927)  Peter  Graeme,  oboe; 
Emanuel  Hurwitz  and  Ivor  McMahon, 
violins;  Cecil  Aronowitz,  viola;  Te- 
rence Weil,  cello  (Ev.  3135)  BEN- 
JAMIN BRITTEN  Phantasy-Quartet 
for  the  Oboe  and  Strings  (1932)  Har- 
old Gomberg,  oboe;  Galimir  Quartet 
(Count.  5504)  PAUL  HINDEMITH 
Sonata  for  Oboe  and  Piano  (1938) 
Harold  Gomberg,  oboe;  Dimitri  Mitro- 
poulos,  piano  (Col.  ML  5306)  FRAN- 
CIS POULENC  Sonata  for  Oboe 
(1962)  Harry  Shulman,  oboe  (Lyr. 
7193)    (July  25) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  23) 

10:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Leo  Gorcey?  Richard  Lamparski  in- 
terviews the  former  "Dead  End  Kid." 
(July  23) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant.   (July  23) 

11:15  LISTENING  BACK  #11  Sounds 
of  Silent  Films  with  Bob  Brown.  (July 
23) 

11:45  CLIFFORD  MASON  ON 
THEATER  A  rebroadcast  of  Mr. 
Mason's  July  20  program. 

12:15  MAN  THE  EXPLORER  OF  LIFE 
A  program  on  the  new  biology.  (CBC) 
(July  22) 

12:45  THE  LETTERS  OF  JOHN  KEATS 
(KPFA)   (July  23) 

1:30  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #2  For 
details,  see  July  22. 

2:00  ARTS  EXTRA  A  rebroadcast  of 
last  night's  program. 


WBAI 


Page    19 


3:00   SONIA   MALKINE  A   rebroadcast 

of  the  July  23  program. 
4:00    YOUNG    PEOPLE'S    PROGRAM 

The  Grand  Finale  of  The  Land  of 
Green  Ginger.  (This  was  originally 
recorded  for  WBAI  in  1962) 

5:00  STRING  QUARTETS  Works  by 
Boccherini,  Faure  and  Bartok.  Details, 
July  12. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de   Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Students  for  a  Democratic  So- 
ciety.   (July  25) 

7:15  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  Andrew  Sarris, 
editor  of  the  English  language  edi- 
tion of  the  Cahiers  du  Cinema,  on 
current  films.    (July  26) 

7:45  BORIS  KARLOFF  A  BBC  inter- 
view by  Derek  Parker.   (July  21) 

8:00  MIRACLES:  Poems  by  Children  of 
the  English-Speaking  World  Richard 
Lewis  reads  from  and  discusses  his 
collection  of  poetry  with  Ellen  Jaffe. 
Mr.  Lewis  travelled  around  the  world 
to  find  children's  writing  and  to  ex- 
plore the  world  of  children.  (July  27) 

8:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.   (July  25) 

9:45  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #15  The  fif- 
teenth of  twenty  readings  from  Life 
In  Mexico  by  Fanny  Calderon  de  la 
Barca,  presented  courtesy  of  Double- 
day  &  Co.  The  reader  is  Fredi  Dun- 
dee.  (July  25) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  25) 

11:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  Or  Tomor- 
row or  the  day  after.  Mostly  jazz, 
presented  by  Elisabeth  Vandermei. 
(July  29) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass,    sighing  like  a   furnace. 


THURSDAY,  JULY  25 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  the  J, 
by  himself  walking,  to  himself  talk- 
ing. 

9:00  MUSIC  OF  ANDREA  AND  GIO- 
VANNI GABRIELI  GIOVANNI  GA- 
BRIELI  Motets:  Plaudite,  psallite;  In 
Ecclesis;  O  Magnum  Mysterium  E. 
Power  Biggs,  organ;  Gregg  Smith 
Singers;  Texas  Boys'  Choir  of  Fort 
Worth;  Edward  Tarr  Brass  Ensem- 
ble/Negri  (Col.  MS  7071)  ANDREA 
GABRIELI  Gloria  in  Excelsis  Deo; 
Ricercar;  O  Crux  Splendidior;  Magnifi- 
cat. Ambrosian  Singers;  String  and 
Brass  Ensemble  /  Stevens  (Angel  S- 
36443)  GIOVANNI  GABRIELI  Hodie 
Christus  Natus  Est;  Three  Mass  Move- 
ments; Deus  qui  Beatum  Marcum  E. 
Power  Biggs,  organ;  Gregg  Smith 
Singers;  Texas  Boys'  Choir;  Edward 
Tarr  Brass  Ensemble;  Negri  (Col.  MS 
7071) 


10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  24) 

10:30  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #  15  Fredi 
Dundee  reads  the  book  by  Fanny  Cal- 
deron de  la  Barca.  (July  24) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  N.Y.   SDS.   (July   24) 

11:15  SOME  QUESTIONS  ABOUT  THE 
NEGATIVE  INCOME  TAX  A  rebroad- 
cast of  Mr.  Sobotka's  July  23  program. 

11:30  A  FAREWELL  TO  STEAM 
Canadian  railroading  before  the  diesel. 
(CBS)    (July  23) 

12:00  THE  PLANNING  PROFESSIONS 
AGAINST  THE  WAR  For  details,  see 
listing  for  July  14. 

2:60  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  24  program. 

3:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  A  rebroad- 
cast of  Don  Schlitten's  July  21  pro- 
gram. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Help!  It's  David  and  Caryn  with  Wat- 
kins  Rock. 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  OBOE  #6  For  de- 
tails, see  listing  for  July  24. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer. 

7:00  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  May- 
be we'll  hear  some  solid  facts  about 
the  new  site  of  the  station  from 
friendly  Frank  Millspaugh.   (July  28) 

7:15  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
Announcements  of  upcoming  benefits, 
meetings  and  charity  sales,  produced 
by  Sandra  Margolin.   (July  26) 


7:30  COMMENTARY  by  Ayn  Rand, 
author  and  social  critic.   (July  28) 

8:00  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  The  songs 
and  stories  of  Stevenson  Phillips. 
(July  26) 

8:30  CANDLELIGHT  AND  (MORE) 
BRINE  Susan  Levine  and  Jerry 
Friedman  improvise  on  sacred  music 
and  secular  themes.  The  voice  of  their 
Junior  Reader  is  that  of  David  Foote. 
(KPFA) 

8:50  LIVINSKY  AT  THE  WEDDING 
Byron  Bryant  introduces  a  Columbia 
record  in  which  Julian  Rose  is  heard 
in  all  four  parts  of  his  adventures 
at   a   wedding.    (KPFA)    (July   26) 

9:15  TALK-BACK  A  live  discussion  of 
a  current  event,  book  or  article  fol- 
lowed by  a  period  during  which  lis- 
teners can  question  the  participants 
by  calling  OX  7-8506. 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with   Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  26) 

11:00  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  The 
fourth  part  of  the  six-part  story  by 
Stanley  Weyman  about  Gilles  de 
Berault.    (BBC)    (July  26) 

11:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  Chris  Albertson 
has  music  wherever  he  goes,  from 
Denmark  to  Chicago.    (July  26) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  In  every- 
thing that  relates  to  folk,  Fass  is  a 
whole  encyclopedia  ahead  of  the  rest 
of  the  world. 


FRIDAY,  JULY  26 


°*/t  w-%58*  h  st  marKs  pU"^ 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  Jos- 
ephson  speaks  to  dear  hearts  across 
the  airways. 

9:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  OTTO 
LUENING  Gargoyles  for  violin  solo 
and  synthesized  sound.  Max  Pollikoff, 
violin  (Col.  ML  5966)  WILLIAM 
BERGSMA  The  Fortunate  Islands 
Orchestra  of  the  Accademia  Nazio- 
nale  di  Santa  Cecilia,  Rome  /  Alfredo 
Antonini  (CRI  112)  MARIO  DAVI- 
DOVSKY  Electronic  Study  No.  1 
(Col.  ML  5966)  Short  Pieces  for  the 
Piano  by  INGOLF  DAHL,  MIRIAM 
GIDEON  and  SOL  BERKOWITZ. 
Robert  Helps,  piano.  (RCA  Vic.  LSC- 
7042)  LUKAS  FOSS  String  Quartet 
#1  American  Art  Quartet  (Col.  MS- 
5476) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July   25) 

10:30  UNDER  THE  RED  ROBE  Part  4. 
(BBC)    (July  25) 

11:00  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  by  Andrew 
Sarris.   (July  24) 

11:30  COMMUNITY  BULLETIN  BOARD 
with   Sandra  Margolin.    (July  25) 

11:45  AMERICAN  ODYSSEY  with  Stev- 
enson Phillips.    (July  25) 

12:15  LIVINSKY  AT  THE  WEDDING 
A  rebroadcast  of  the  July  25  program. 
(KPFA) 

12:40  THE  MIND'S  EYE  THEATRE: 
Boy  in  Darkness  A  dramatic  reading 


Page  20 


WBAI  £ 


of  the  story  by  Mervyn  Peake.  For 
details,   see  July  20. 

3:30  JAZZ  AT  HOME  with  Chris  Al- 
bertson.    (July  25) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Insight  Out,  Jeff  and  Allen  share  an 
off-center   viewpoint. 

5:00  MUSIC  FROM  FRANCE  A  pro- 
gram from  the  Festival  de  Saint-Nec- 
taire  that  includes  works  by  EDGAR 
VARESE,  PIERRE  BARBOUD,  JA- 
NINE  CHARBONNIER,  IANNIS  XE- 
NAKIS  and  MICHEL  PHILIPPOT. 
Paris  Instrumental  Ensemble  of  Con- 
temporary Music  /Konstantin  Simono- 
vitch. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:    Tana   de   Gamez. 

7:00  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  of  the  week's 
news  by  Dick  Davy.    (July  29) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July  27) 

7:30  SPECIAL  REPORT  A  news  event 
examined  in  detail  by  someone  from 
the  News  and  Public  Affairs  Dept. 
(July  27) 

8:00  THE  ROLE  AND  REALITY  OF 
RACE  A  talk  by  Gunnar  Myrdal  on 
the  relation  of  "race"  to  U.S.  foreign 
policy.  Recorded  at  the  American 
Foreign  Policy  Assoc,  meetings  in  May 
at  the  N.Y.  Hilton.   (July  27) 

9:00  MISCELLANY 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate interest  from  the  news  and 
Public   Affairs   Dept.    (July   29) 

10:15   MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  27) 

11:00  STREET  SCENE:  Detroit  A  sober 
explanation  of  the  meaning  of  Black 
Power  and  a  description  of  the  break- 
down of  traditional  political  functions 
in  that  city.  A  report  by  Frank  Joyce 
and  the  Rev.  Albert  Cleage  to  the 
staff  of  the  CSDI.   (July  28) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Bob  Fass 
makes  a  heap  of  all  his  winnings  and 
risks  it  on  one  turn  of  pitch  and  toss. 


SATURDAY,  JULY  27 


:00  CANTATAS  OF  JOHANN  SEBAS- 
TIAN BACH  #2  Cantata  #90,  "Ein 
feste  Burg  ist  unser  Gott"  Agnes  Gie- 
bel,  s^oprano;  Wilhelmine  Matthes, 
contralto;  Richard  Lewis,  tenor;  Heinz 
Rehfuss,  bass;  Bach  Chorus  and  Or- 
chestra of  the  Amsterdam  Philhar- 
monic Society/ Andre  Vandenoot  (Van. 
SRV  219)  Cantata  #32,  "Liebster 
Jesu,  mein  Verlangen"  Bazia  Ret- 
chitzka,  soprano;  Dieter  Wolf,  bass; 
Laubach  Choir;  Saar  Chamber  Orches- 
tra/Ristenpart  (Mus.  MG  122)  Can- 
tata #104,  "Du  Hirte  Israel,  hore" 
Richard  Lewis,  tenor;  Heinz  Rehfuss, 
bass;  Bach  Chorus  and  Orchestra  of 
the  Amsterdam  Philharmonic  Society/ 
Andre  Vandernoot  (Van.  SRV  219) 
Cantata    #79,    "Gott,   der    Herr,    ist 


Sonn'  und  Schild"  Ingeborg  Reichelt, 
soprano;  Annelotte  Sieber  -  Ludwig, 
contralto;  Jakob  Stampfii,  bass;  Lau- 
cach  Choir;  Saar  Chamber  Orch/Ris- 
tenpart  (Mus.  MG  122) 

9:30  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
R  o  n  n  y  Watkins,  reading,  talking, 
dreamifTg. 

10:30  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  26) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Will  Brady. 
(July  26) 

11:00  SPECIAL  REPORT  A  rebroadcast 
of  last  night's  program. 

11:30  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Mr.  Whit- 
more's  July  21  program,   again. 

12:00  MIRACLES:  Poems  by  Children 
of  the  English-Speaking  World  For 
details,  see  listing  for  July  24. 

12:45   MISCELLANY 

1:00  THE  ROLE  AND  REALITY  OF 
RACE  A  talk  by  Gunnar  Myrdal.  For 
details  see  July  26. 

2:00  TWO  HOURS  OF  JAZZ:  Mingus 
Among  Us  A  program  tracing  the 
career  of  the  controversial  bassist  and 
composer,  Charlie  Mingus,  presented 
by  Jack  McKinney. 

4:00  FEINSTEIN  AND  .  .  .  Omar  Sharif 
The  KPFA  interviewer  takes  on  Mr. 
Sharif.   (July  30) 

5:15  ON  VIETNAM  William  J.  Lederer, 
author  of  A  Nation  of  Sheep  and  co- 
author of  The  Ugly  American,  talks 
with  Dale  Minor  about  his  new  book 
about  Vietnam,  Our  Own  Worst 
Enemy. 

6:15   MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  GENESIS  OF  A  NATION:  Fears 
and  Frustrations  A  consideration  of 
reasons  (other  than  those  discussed 
last  week)  for  Canada's  confederation. 
The  21st  in  a  series  on  the  history 
of  Canada     (CBC) 

7:15  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  Sam 
Julty  discusses  the  relations  between 
cars  and  carnality.   (July  29) 

7:45  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS 
William  Mandel  answers  questions 
received  from  listeners  during  the 
month.    (KPFA)    (July  28) 

8:15  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  Compensa- 
tion or  Integration  Dr.  Carl  Marburger, 
Comm.  of  Education  for  New  Jersey, 
Mrs.  Thorny  Joyner,  Ass'st.  Super- 
visor of  Elementary  Education  in 
Newark,  Dr.  Abraham  Bernstein, 
Assoc.  Pirof.  at  Brooklyn  College,  and 
Mr.  Herbert  Lichtman,  Principal  of 
Newark's  Bergen  Street  School,  in 
a  discussion  recorded  at  Newark  State 
College.  The  third  of  four  programs 
on  urban  problems.  (July  31) 

9:15  MISCELLANY 

9:30  IN  THE  FIST  OF  THE  REVOLU- 
TION Jose  Yglesias  discusses  his 
recent  book  with  Tana  de  Gamez. 
(To  be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

10:30  MILTON  BABBITT  Mr.  Babbitt 
and  Ann  McMillan  talk  about  music 
and  play  some  of  Mr.  Babbitt's  work. 
(To    be    rebroadcast    in    August) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  Steve  Post  puts 
fleas  in  your  ears. 


SUNDAY,  JULY  28 


8:00  MUSIC  BY  FRANZ  SCHUBERT 
The  Shepherd  on  the  Rock,  Op.  129  Be- 

nita  Valente,  soprano;  Harold  Wright, 
clarinet;  Rudolph  Serkin,  piano  (Col. 
ML  5336)  Magnificat  in  C  Major  Eliza- 
beth Thomann,  soprano;  Rose  Bahl, 
alto;  Kurt  Equiluz;  Gerhard  Eder, 
bass;  Kurt  Rapf,  organ;  Akademie- 
Kammerchor  Vienna  New  Symphony/ 
Max  Goberman  (LRM  505)  Auf  der 
Strom,  Op.  119  Margot  Stagliano,  so- 
prano; James  Stagliano,  horn;  Paul 
Ulanowsky,  piano  (Boston  200)  Inci- 
dental Music  for  Rosamunde  Aafje 
Heynis,  contralto;  Nederlands  Radio 
Chorus,  Concertgebouw  Orchestra  of 
Amsterdam  /  Bernard  Haitink  (PHS 
900-088) 

9:30  MUSIC  OF  THE  WORLD'S  PEO- 
PLES Ethnic  music  from  all  over  pre- 
sented by  the  late  Dr.  Henry  Cowell. 
From  the  WBAI   Archives. 

10:00  GOLDEN  VOICES  Great  vocal 
arias  presented  by  the  late  Anthony 
Boucher.    (KPFA) 

10:30  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER 
with  Mr.   Millspaugh.    (July  25) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  Ayn  Rand. 
(July  25) 

11:15  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET 
PRESS  by  William  Mandel.  (July  27) 

11:45  HERBERT  MARCUSE  A  talk  by 
the  author  and  social  critic  on  "The 
New  Man,  The  New  Culture"  (July  21) 

1:15  STREET  SCENE:  Detroit  A  pre- 
sentation to  the  staff  of  the  Center 
for  the  Study  of  Democratic  Institu- 
tions. For  details,  see  July  26. 

2:15  FRANZ  SCHUBERT:  Songs  of 
Greek  Antiquity  Dietrich  Fischer- 
Dieskau,  baritone;  Joerg  Demus,  piano. 
(Heliodor  HS  25062) 

3:00  POPULATION  GROWTH  AND 
WORLD  HUNGER:  Is  There  A  Solu- 
tion? Harrison  Brown,  Prof,  of  Science 
and  Government  and  Prof,  of  Geo- 
chemistry at  the  Calif.  Inst,  of 
Technology  and  author  of  The  Next 
Hundred  Years  speaks  on  this  prob- 
lem. A  SIPI  lecture  given  at  the  New 
School  for  Social  Research.  (To  be 
rebroadcast  in   August.) 

4:00  NIGHT  INTO  DAY  A  hunk  of  Fass. 

5:00  THE  NEXT  FIFTY  YEARS  #9 
Hermann  Kahn  of  the  Hudson  Insti- 
tute speaks  on  Technology  in  the  Fu- 
ture. From  the  1967  American  Insti- 
tute  of  Planners   Conference. 

5:45  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Produced  and 
sometimes  presented  by  Tom  Whit- 
more.   (August  3) 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS 

6:45  THEATER  REVIEW  Isaiah  Shef- 
fer  on  a  recent  play.  (July  31) 

7:00  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN  A  surprise  book  review,  prob- 
ably by  someone  you  know.  (July  29) 

7:15  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.  Pike,  currently  a  member  of  the 
staff  of  the  Center  for  the  Study  of 


,WBAI 


Page  21 


Democratic    Institutions.    (July    29) 

7:30  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
the  Young  Americans  for  Freedom. 
(July  29) 

7:45  CONVERSATIONS  Julius  Lester, 
SNCC  leader  and  Guardian  columnist, 
talks  with  a  fellow  activist  about  the 
movement.    (July  29) 

8:15  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  The 
weekly  roundup  of  the  summer  dol- 
drum  in  the  arts.  Participants  may 
include  Gene  Thornton  for  art  and 
architecture,  Rose  Mary  Anderson  for 
theater,  Baird  Searles  for  dance  and 
moderation.    (July   29) 

9:00  THE  LIMITS  OF  THE  AMERICAN 
SYSTEM  Samuel  Huntington,  Chair- 
man of  the  Dept.  of  Government  at 
Harvard  University,  speaking  at  the 
meetings  of  the  Foreign  Policy  As- 
sociation in  May  of  this  year.  (To 
be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

10:00  REPORT  ON  MUSIC  by  Alan 
Rich  of  New  York.  (July  30) 

10:30  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD 
News,  views  and  interviews  by  Tana 
de  Gamez.  (July  30) 

11:00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  Presented 
this  week  by  Ira   Gitler.    (August   1) 

12:00  THE  OUTSIDE  with  Steve  Post, 
the  chicken  for  your  Sunday  pot. 


MONDAY,  JULY  29 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  starts 
another   hebdomad. 


9:00  MUSIC  FOR  THE  OBOE  #7  BO- 

HUSLAV  MARTINU  Concerto  for 
Oboe  and  Small  Orchestra  (  1957  ) 
Frantisek  Hantak,  oboe;  Brno  Phil- 
harmonic/Tur  no  vsky  (Pari.  S  606) 
BRUNO  MADERNA  Concerto  for 
Oboe  and  Orchestra  (1962)  Lothar 
Faber,  oboe  and  English  horn;  Rome 
Symphony  Orch./Maderna  (Vic.  VICS 
1312)  KLAUS  HUBER  Noctes  Intel- 
ligibilis  Luces  (1961)  Heinz  Holliger, 
oboe;  Edith  Picht-Axenfeld,  harpsi- 
chord (Communaute  de  travail  pour 
la  diffusion  de  la  musique  Suisse  64- 
21)  CHARLES  WUORINEN  Cham- 
ber Concerto  for  Oboe  and  Ten  Play- 
ers (1965)  Josef  Marx,  oboe;  Group 
for  Contemporary  Music  at  Col.  Univ. 
/Wuorinen.    (July  30) 

10:15  A  SATIRICAL  VIEW  by  Dick 
Davy.    (July   26) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Bishop  James 
A.   Pike.    (July  28) 

10:45  COMMENTARY  by  members  of 
YAF.    (July  28) 

11:00  CONVERSATIONS  with  Julius 
Lester.   (July  28) 

11:30  NEWS  FOR  CAR  OWNERS  by 
Sam  Julty.    (July  27) 

12:00  THE  CRITICAL  PEOPLE  (July 
28) 

12:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  26  program. 

1:45  BOOKS  TO  BUY,  BORROW  OR 
BURN   (July  28) 

2:00  COMPUTER  TECHNOLOGY:  A 
Potential  Threat  to  Personal  Privacy 
A  talk  by  Arthur  R.  Miller.   Prof,  of 


Law  at  the  Univ.  of  Michigan.  From 
the   Midway    #1219. 

3:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  with  Elisa- 
beth Vandermei.    (July  24) 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Richard  Schiffman  uncovers  The  Real 
Story. 

5:00  STRING  QUARTETS  For  details, 
see  July  16. 

6:15   MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:   Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn, 
author  of  How  to  Stay  Out  of  the 
Draft.   (July  30) 

7:15  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John  Marsh,  teacher  and  language 
expert.    (July  30) 

7:30  SCRAPS  A  sound  collage  by  Chris 
Albertson.    (July  30) 

7:45  A  TALK  WITH  WILDER  PEN- 
FIELD  Dr.  Penfield,  one  of  the  world's 
leading  neurologists  and  neurosur- 
geons, talks  about  his  discoveries  con- 
cerning the  mechanisms  of  the  brain. 
(CBC)   (To  be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

8:15  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #9  A 
continuation  of  the  series  on  folk  art, 
presented  by  Ralph  Rinzler.  (July  30) 

8:45  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS:  The 
Women  in  Our  Prisons  A  panel  dis- 
cussion moderated  by  David  Rothen- 
berg  of  the  Fortune  Society.  (July  30) 

9:15  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs   Dept.   (July  30) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  30) 

11:00  THE  NEW  SYMPOSIUM:  A  Pro- 
gram From  and  For  the  Homosexual 
Community  A  discussion  of  "gay" 
vocabulary:  is  "faggot"  any  more  ac- 
ceptable from  the  outside  world  than 
"nigger"  these  days,  and  other  such 
questions.  The  program  begins  with 
news  and  reviews.    (July  30) 

11:30  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #3  The 
'Spelman'  and  musical  watersprites. 
(To  be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 
Fass.   Emphyteusis  is  not  a  disease. 


TUESDAY,  JULY  30 


Current  cast  of  The  Critical  People  (not  quite  complete).  Standing,  left  to  right,  Ron 

Nelson,   Deborah  Jowitt,   Baird   Searles,    Murray   Ralph.   Seated:  Gene  Thornton,   Sam 

Sanders,   Martin   Last,   Rose  Mary  Anderson,  Al   Lees,   Neal  Conan. 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  re- 
gards you  with  an  indifference  close- 
ly bordering  on  aversion. 

9:00  TWENTIETH-CENTURY  AMER- 
ICAN MUSIC  YEHUDI  WYNER  Con- 
certo Duo  for  Violin  and  Piano  (1955- 
57)  Matthew  Raimondi,  violin;  Ye- 
hudi  Wyner,  piano  (CRI  161)  JACOB 
DRUCKMAN  Dark  Upon  the  Harp 
(1961-62)  Jan  DeGaetani,  mezzo-so- 
prano; Gerald  Carlyss,  vibraphone  and 
percussion;  Robert  Ayres,  glockenspiel 
and  percussion;  New  York  Brass  Quin- 
tet (CRI  167)  ARTHUR  BERGER 
String  Quartet  (1958)  Lenox  Quartet 
(CRI  161) 


Page  22 


WB# 


10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.   (July  29) 

10:30  COMMENTARY  by  Conrad  Lynn. 
(July  29) 

10:45  EDUCATION  COMMENTARY  by 
John   Marsh.    (July  29) 

11:00  BOTH  SIDES  OF  THE  BARS: 
The  Women  in  Our  Prisons.  (July  29) 

11:30  GRASS  ROOTS  AMERICA  #9 
For  details,  see  July  29. 

12:00  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  A 
rebroadcast  of  the  July  29   program. 

1:00  SCRAPS  by  Chris  Albertson.  (July 
29) 

1:15  LATIN  AMERICAN  WORLD  by 
Tana   de    Gamez.    (July   28) 

1:45  THE  NEW  SYMPOSIUM^  A  Pro- 
gram From  and  For  the  Homosexual 
Community  For  details,  see  listing  for 
July  29. 

2:15  REPORT  ON  MUSIC  by  Alan  Rich. 
(July  28) 

2:45  FEINSTEIN  AND  .  .  .  Omar  Sharif 
A  rebroadcast  of  Prof.  Feinstein's  July 
27  program. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Bonnie  returns  with  Tuesday's  Child. 
Then  you  hear  Face  to  Face  with  Ron 
Mace   and  his  guests. 

5:00  MUSIC  FOR  OBOE  #7  Works  by 
MARTINU,  MADERNA,  HUBER  and 
WUORINEN.  For  details,  see  July  29. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer. 

7:00  THE  MONTH  IN  REVIEW  A  re- 
view of  events  and  issues  conducted 
by  the  editors  of  Monthly  Review. 
(July  31) 

7:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Lynn  Bari?  The  queen  of  the  B-pic- 
tures  is  interviewed  by  Richard  Lam- 
parski.  Among  her  important  films 
were  "The  Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey" 
and  "Hello,  Frisco,  Hello".  They  talk 
about  Alice  Faye  and  Joan  Crawford. 
(July  31) 

8:00  THE  MOVIES  Bob  Sitton  inter- 
views someone  who  either  is  in  or 
makes   motion   pictures.    (Aug.    1) 

8:30  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabricant, 
Legislative  Director  of  the  NY  chapter 
of  the  ACLU.  (July  31) 

8:45  SWEDISH  FOLK  MUSIC  #4 
Medieval  and  'Traditional'  ballads.  (To 
be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

9:15  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT:  Is  It  Torture?  The 
Constitution  prohibits  cruel  and  un- 
usual punishment.  If  the  death  penal- 
ty is  in  fact  torture,  it  is  unconstitu- 
tional. A  discussion  on  the  physical 
pain  and  mental  anguish  of  the  con- 
demned; from  the  Center  for  the  study 
of  Democratic  Institutions  #413.  (July 
31) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  31) 

11:00  THE  MARIAN  McPARTLAND 
PROGRAM  Soft,  sweet  jazz  presented 
by  Marian   McPartland.    (July  31) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  with  Bob 


Fass.   His  mistress  is  the  open  mike 
and  the  bright  eyes  of  danger. 


WEDNESDAY,  JULY  31 


7:00  IN  THE  BEGINNING  Larry  sows 
hurry  and  reaps  indigestion. 

9:00  TWENTIETH-CENTURY  AMER- 
ICAN MUSIC  FREDERICK  JACOBI 
Fantasy,  for  Viola  and  Piano  (1941) 
Louise  Rood,  viola;  Irene  Jacobi,  pia- 
no (CRI  146)  ELLIOTT  CARTER 
Eight  Etudes  and  a  Fantasy  for  Wood- 
wind Quartet  (1950)  Murray  Panitz, 
flute;  David  Glazer,  clarinet;  Jerome 
Roth,  oboe;  Bernard  Garfield,  bassoon 
(CRI  118)  FREDERICK  JACOBI 
String  Quartet  #3  (1945)  Lyric  Art 
Quartet  (CRI  146)  QUINCY  POR- 
TER String  Quartet  #6  (1950)  Stan- 
ley Quartet  (CRI  118) 

10:15  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (July  30) 

10:30  WHATEVER  BECAME  OF  .  .  . 
Lynn  Bari?  The  queen  of  B-pictures 
talks  with  Richard  Lamparski.  (July 
30) 

11:00  COMMENTARY  by  Neil  Fabri- 
cant.  (July  30) 

11:15  THE  MONTH  IN  REVIEW  A  re- 
broadcast of  last  night's  program. 

11:45  CRISIS  IN  THE  CITY:  Compensa- 
tion or  Integration  The  third  of  four 
programs  on  urban  problems.  For  de- 
tails, see  July  27. 

12:45  THEATER  REVIEW  by  Isaiah 
Sheffer.    (July  28) 

1:00  RADIO  HAPPENING  #2  A  re- 
broadcast of  Mr.  Cage  and  Mr.  Feld- 
man.    (July  21) 

2:00  THE  REALITIES  OF  CAPITAL 
PUNISHMENT:  Is  It  Torture?  For 
details,  see  July  30  listing. 

3:00  THE  MARIAN  McPARTLAND  PRO- 
GRAM A  rebroadcast  of  last  night's 
program. 

4:00  YOUNG  PEOPLE'S  PROGRAM 
Another  program  in  the  open  forum 
for  open  people. 

5:00  MUSIC  OF  NIELS  GADE  For  de- 
tails, see  listing  for  July  18. 

6:15  MISCELLANY 

6:30  NEWS  with  Paul  Schaffer.  Latin 
America:  Tana  de  Gamez. 

7:00  COMMENTARY  by  members  of  the 
Students  for  a  Democratic  Society. 
(Aug.  1) 

7:15  FILMS  IN  FOCUS  Comments,  criti- 
cisms and  causeries  by  Andrew  Sar- 
ris,  a  longtime  movie  critic  for  the 
station.  (Aug.  2) 

7:45  NEW  YORK  CITY  An  "open"  pro- 
gram devoted  to  the  problems,  issues 
and  happenings  of  this  metropolis. 
(To  be  rebroadcast  in  August) 

8:45  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS  SPECIAL  An 
hour  left  open  for  a  program  of  im- 
mediate importance  from  the  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Dept.   (Aug.  1) 

9:45  LIFE  IN  MEXICO  #16  The  let- 
ters  and  journals  of  Fanny   Calderon 


de  la  Barca  read  by  Fredi  Dundee. 
Text  courtesy  of  the  publishers,  Dou- 
bleday  &   Co.    (Aug.  1) 

10:15  MISCELLANY 

10:30  NEWS   with  Paul   Fischer. 

10:45  WAR  SUMMARY  by  Paul  Schaf- 
fer.  (Aug.  1) 

11:00  SOUNDS  OF  TODAY  New  sounds 
—  for  the  most  part,  jazz — presented 
by  the  cosmopolitan  Elisabeth  Van- 
dermei.    (Aug.   5) 

12:00  RADIO  UNNAMEABLE  Sweetest 
li'l  feller,  everybody  knows!  dunno 
what  to  call  him  —  maybe  Bob  Fass  ? 

FOLIO    CLASSIFIED 

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Folio  Advertising,  30  East  39th  Street, 
New  York,  N.Y.  10016.  OX  7-2288.  Dead- 
line 4  weeks  in  advance  of  beginning  date 
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in  the  Folio  are  addressed  to  all  persons 
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Agencies  get  15%  discount.  If  you  want 
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Whatever  Happened  to  "Freethought,  Cri- 
ticism and  Satire?"  GRAFFITI  magazine 
is  where  it's  at.  $2 — 6  issues,  $4 — 12 
issues.  Plus  Johnson,  Dylan  poster.  Box 
W,  88  Bleecker  St.,   NYC   10012. 

WBAPS  FRENCH  TROUBADOUR 
SONIA   MALKINE 

sings  French  songs  of  the  Provinces  on 
her  second  LP.  $5  P.P.  with  translations. 
For  records  or  personal  appearances, 
write  to  FOLKMUSIC,  BOX  496,  WOOD- 
STOCK,  N.  Y.   12498. 

EAR  PIERCING 

The  CONRAD  SHOP  will  pierce  your  ears 
while  you  admire  our  collection  of  fine 
jewelry  and  sculpture. 

THE  CONRAD  SHOP 
108  Macdougal  Street    Phone:  GR  3-5355 
Open  3  P.M.  to  11   P.M.,  except  Sundays 

RECORDER  MUSIC  specialists.  CAPE  COD 
BOOKS  Listings  available.  Provincetown 
Bookshop. 

246  Commercial. 
Provincetown,   Mass.  02657 

STEVENSON  PHILLIPS  of  American  Odys 

sey  needs  four-to-five  (or  more)  rooms 
Apartment,  studio,  loft,  brothel  (if  neces 
sary),  what  have  you?  His  max  is  $175 
Prefers  West  Village,  Brooklyn  Heights 
maybe  East  Village.  JU  6-6300. 


* 


WBAI 


Page  23 


DIRTY  OLD  MEN 
will  love  you 


...  in  a  dress  from 

KRISHNA  GORBY 
$12-25 

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E.  15  St.  &  Kings  Highway,  Brooklyn 

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PROSPECT  PARK  S.  W. 

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stained    glass    windows;    airy.    499-0591. 

Heraclitus  said:  "All  is  movement." 

We  will  move  most  things  to  most  places-' 

most    any    time.    Very,    very    low    rates. 

24-hour  day. 

CCC  Movers  673-9365 

Comments  on  the  Cort  Coffee  Shop 
"Poison,  pure  poison!"  "I  wouldn't  eat 
there  if  it  was  the  only  place  in  town." 
"Me,  eat  at  Cort?  You  must  be  kidding!" 
Add  your  comments  to  this  list.  It  may 
be  a  lousy  restaurant  but  it's  one  hell  of 
an  experience.  Cort  Coffee  Shop,  10  East 
39th  Street,  or  call  MU  3-9315  for  slow, 
sullen,  Cort  service. 


APARTMENT  WANTED 

Richard  Lamparski  is  looking  for  a  one 
or  two-bedroom  apartment  in  the  West 
Village,  East  Side  or  Chelsea  for  October 
occupancy.  Can  qualify  for  professional 
apartment.  Lives  alone.  Has  no  pets. 
Gives  no  parties.  Call  Lamparski  at 
0X7-2288  weekdays  after   11   A.M. 

AVAILABLE   BARTER   ITEMS 

The  following  items  and  services  offered  for 
barter  during  the  Marathon  are  still  available.  For 
price  and  other  information,  call  OX  7-2993  week- 
days between  noon  and  five  p.m. 

(All   animals,   if   not  specifically  stated  to   be  stuf- 
fed, are  presumed  to  be  alive  and  healthy) 
Assorted    varieties    of    cats   and    dogs 
Gerbils 

Stuffed  turtle  and   crow 
Larry'   Josephson's   morning   show  doodles 
Drawings  by  Lisa 
Drawings  of   Grand  Central   Yip-in 
Other  assorted   artwork 
Painting,   sketching,   photography  to  order 
Appliance   and   radio   repair 
Various   kinds   of   audio   equipment 
Used-car  purchase  checked  out  (If  you  buy  one,  Sam 

Julty  will   check   it) 
Baby-sitting 
Many  books 

Somebody's   little  black  book  (genuine) 
Buttons    (slogan    type) 
Wall   bookshelf  unit  designed 
All  kinds  of  clothing 
Dating   services 
Chafing   dish 
Movie  film 

Full-length   Czechoslovakian   film 
Commercials 

Dinner  for  three  with  a  family 
Goodies  for  a  Sunday  breakfast  for  10 
Cordon   Bleu  recipe 

Loaf  of   home-made  Scandinavian   bread 
Cooking  services 
Homemade  caviar  mayonnaise 
Six-foot  room  divider 
9x12   nylon  tweed  rug 
4  red  canvas  camp  stools 
Batik  wall  hanging 


Jade  stones  cut  to  order 

Bead   necklaces 

Whalebone  &   coral  necklace 

Art  lessons 

Belly-dancing   lessons 

Karate  lessons 

Russian   language   course   records 

Lessons   in    Esperanto,   French,    Italian 

Lessons    in    Spanish,    Hebrew,    Persian 

Math,    psychology,    sociology,    economics    tutoring 

Lecture  on   Afro-American   history 

Guitar,   flute,    piano,   saxophone   lessons 

Clarinet,  trumpet   lessons 

Drum,   harpsichord,   Jew's  harp  lessons 

Tutoring  in  biology,  chemistry 

Tennis  lessons 

Back  issues  of  left-wing  magazines 

Various  subscriptions  and  back   issues 

Kymograph 

Analytic   consultation 

Baby  carriages 

Pool  cue 

21  foot  sloop 

Bottle  caps 

Alarm    system 

NYC  no  parking  sign 

Devil's  eye  from   lamp   in  Grayson   Kirk's  office 

Slides  of  animal   tissues 

Outboard  motor 

Horoscopes  cast 

One  hour  of  IBM  1620  computer  time 

Translation  of  Persian  manuscripts 

Translation  from    Italian,  French,   Spanish  and   Hebrew 

Poetry  reading  by  poets 

Campaign   speech   by   professional   writer 

Consulting   statistian's   services 

Chemical   engineering   consultation 

Haircuts 

Computer    programming   services 

Performance   by  a  jug  band 

Pop  or  folk  songs  composed  to  order 

Performances   by   rock  groups 

Musical  instruments 

Singing   for   children 

Old  sheet  music 

Photographic   services 

Assorted   photographs 

Five  motorcycle  terrorists  for  your  neighborhood 

Poetry  written  to  order 

Posters 

Many  records  -  all  speeds 

Assorted  tapes 

Motorcycle  rides 

Assorted  sports  equipment 

Old  television  sets 

Pony  rides 

Technical  typing 


a  summeR  collegium 
in  e^Rly  music 


Joseph  i^oone 


musical 

OlRCCtOR 


august 

5-30 
1968 


For  detailed  information  write  to: 

Mr    George  Soulos  pUtnCy,  V6RmOnt 

Director  of  Music  .     -  m  - 

KS-vt^o,**    windham  college 


support  WBAI 


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